| Literature DB >> 27189821 |
Janet Treasure1, Stephan Zipfel2, Nadia Micali3,4, Tracey Wade5, Eric Stice6, Angélica Claudino7, Ulrike Schmidt1, Guido K Frank8, Cynthia M Bulik9,10, Elisabet Wentz11.
Abstract
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a psychiatric condition characterized by severe weight loss and secondary problems associated with malnutrition. AN predominantly develops in adolescence in the peripubertal period. Without early effective treatment, the course is protracted with physical, psychological and social morbidity and high mortality. Despite these effects, patients are noted to value the beliefs and behaviours that contribute to their illness rather than regarding them as problematic, which interferes with screening, prevention and early intervention. Involving the family to support interventions early in the course of the illness can produce sustained changes; however, those with a severe and/or protracted illness might require inpatient nursing support and/or outpatient psychotherapy. Prevention programmes aim to moderate the overvaluation of 'thinness' and body dissatisfaction as one of the proximal risk factors. The low prevalence of AN limits the ability to identify risk factors and to study the timing and sex distribution of the condition. However, genetic profiles, premorbid features, and brain structures and functions of patients with AN show similarities with other psychiatric disorders and contrast with obesity and metabolic disorders. Such studies are informing approaches to address the neuroadaptation to starvation and the other various physical and psychosocial deficits associated with AN. This Primer describes the epidemiology, diagnosis, screening and prevention, aetiology, treatment and quality of life of patients with AN.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 27189821 DOI: 10.1038/nrdp.2015.74
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Rev Dis Primers ISSN: 2056-676X Impact factor: 52.329