Anorexia Facts
- Anorexia tends to affect the middle and upper socioeconomic classes and Caucasians more often than less advantaged classes and ethnic minorities in the United States.
- The disorder affects about 1% of adolescent girls and about 0.3% of males in the U.S. - People with anorexia tend to show compulsive behaviors, may become obsessed with food, and often show behaviors consistent with other addictions in their efforts to overly control their food intake and weight. - Men with anorexia are more likely to also have other psychological problems; affected women tend to be more perfectionistic and be more displeased with their bodies. -Children and adolescents with anorexia are at risk for a slowing of their growth and development. - The extreme dieting and weight loss of anorexia can lead to a potentially fatal degree of malnutrition. - Other possible complications of anorexia include heart-rhythm disturbances, digestive abnormalities, bone density loss, anemia, and hormonal and electrolyte imbalances. - Given the prevalence of denial of symptoms by individuals with anorexia, gathering information from loved ones of the anorexia sufferer is important in the diagnosis and treatment of the disorder. - Most medications are much better at treating symptoms that are associated with anorexia than addressing the specific symptoms of anorexia themselves. |