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Please note: Eating disorders develop in men, women, girls, and boys. For ease in reading, we have used "she" and "her" in the text below.

Is the individual medically unstable? This is a core question addressed by the primary care physician in developing a treatment plan for a patient with an eating disorder. Early detection of the illness often makes outpatient treatment feasible, allowing the individual to hold a job or attend school. For the patient who is not in urgent need of medical attention but requires 24 hour supervision to curb her abnormal eating habits, the primary care physician is likely to recommend residential treatment. When a patient’s unhealthy eating habits are placing her cardiovascular or neurological status at risk, admission to an acute care hospital is indicated. In addition to providing treatment and monitoring for medical complications, hospitalization is an opportunity for the individual to begin to modify her abnormal eating behaviors, such as starving, binge eating, and purging.


For the patient hospitalized with anorexia nervosa, nutritional rehabilitation is a team effort involving the medical doctor, the psychiatrist and the nutritionist. Daily food and beverage intake is increased gradually in order to prevent the gastrointestinal symptoms and additional emotional distress that might accompany a rapid step-up in calories. A paced, steady approach to nutritional replenishment also reduces the risk of a rare but dangerous refeeding syndrome, which can strike early in the rehabilitation process, manifesting as edema (swelling), shortness of breath, weakness, paresthesias (abnormal nerve sensations such as tingling, prickling, numbness), mental status changes and weight gain that is greater than expected (due to retained fluid). Fluid imbalance, abnormal glucose metabolism, and low levels of phosphorus, potassium and magnesium are also observed. Some patients need supplementary potassium phosphate or sodium phosphate. If left untreated, refeeding syndrome has the potential to affect cardiac, pulmonary and renal function.


Once nutritional restoration is underway, the low blood pressure and slow resting pulse that are characteristic of anorexia nervosa typically go back to normal. Lightheadedness and orthostatic changes in pulse, on the other hand, may take up to several weeks to resolve. To alleviate constipation, a common symptom of anorexia nervosa, a stool softener can be prescribed. Malnutrition sets the stage for delayed gastric emptying (the individual’s stomach takes longer than normal to transmit its contents to the small intestine), which results in a feeling of fullness after ingesting only a small amount and can interfere with a patient’s ability or willingness to take in adequate nutrition. Motility in the stomach generally improves after a few weeks of healthy eating; meanwhile, small frequent meals or liquid supplements can help prevent discomfort. Prior to discharge, the primary physician—in collaboration with the patient, the family and the other professionals on the team—sets up continued care, either in a residential facility or on an outpatient basis.


All treatment settings address the overwhelming drive to exercise that is often associated with eating disorders. As the disease gains momentum, healthy involvement in physical activity can grow excessive as individuals enslave themselves to grueling workouts, even trying to exercise when they are injured or ill. Those who participate in team sports tend to supplement games and group practice sessions by training in private, and it is this solitary exertion that generally constitutes the excess. Perceived pressure to exercise can reach a point where the eating disordered individual can’t slow down without help. For the patient at risk of medical complications, doctors generally recommend a temporary period of restricted exercise in order to conserve her energy and reduce her risk of injury. Although the individual typically protests the exercise limits, she may also sense that her activity level has soared beyond her grasp and therefore experience some relief that the doctor has intervened.


Even when an individual with anorexia nervosa is extremely underweight, she is unlikely to see herself as having a problem and may refuse to engage in treatment. Sometimes the “time out” from athletics helps her realize that she is indeed ill and needs to play an active role in her recovery. The prospects of returning to physical activity can serve as an incentive to get well. The primary care physician lends support to parents as they gently – but firmly – approach their child’s situation from a positive perspective, empathizing with her angst and reminding her that the fastest route back to sports is to feed her body. Throughout treatment, the doctor emphasizes that recommendations are intended not as disciplinary measures but rather as medically necessary ones and advises moms and dads to focus on health, not weight, when discussing body image issues with their children.



References
Differential Diagnosis and Medical Management
Goldstein, M.A., Differential Diagnosis and Medical Management. Presented at Clinicopathological Conference, Pediatric Grand Rounds, “An 18-year-old man with weight loss and abdominal pain,” Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, June 12, 2007.

The role of the primary care practitioner in the treatment of eating disorders
Kreipe, R.E., Yussman, S.M. The role of the primary care practitioner in the treatment of eating disorders. Adolescent Medicine 2003; 14 (1): 133-147.

Medical Evaluation and Management of Eating Disorders in the Primary Care Setting
Mickley, D. Medical Evaluation and Management of Eating Disorders in the Primary Care Setting. Presented at Primary Care Symposium (Multidisciplinary Treatment of Eating Disorders in Adolescents and Adults), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, April 11, 2005.

Diagnosis of eating disorders in primary care
Pritts, S.D., Susman, J. Diagnosis of eating disorders in primary care. American Family Physician 2003; 67 (2): 297-304.

Children and adolescents with eating disorders: the state of the art
Rome, E.S., Ammerman, S., Rosen, D.S., Keller, R.J., Lock, J., Mammel, K.A. ,O’Toole, J., Rees, J.M., Sanders, M.J., Sawyer, S.M., Schneider, M., Sigel, E., Silber, T.J. Children and adolescents with eating disorders: the state of the art. Pediatrics 2003; 111(1): e98-e108.


This page was last updated on October 10, 2007.