当前位置: 首页 > 期刊 > 《英国医生杂志》 > 2005年第17期 > 正文
编号:11384466
Eating disorders and weight problems
http://www.100md.com 《英国医生杂志》
     Introduction

    Adolescence is a time of enormous change in weight and eating. Average weight gain during puberty is 14 kg for girls and 15 kg for boys, with marked differences in body shape between the sexes becoming evident. About 40% of girls (25% of boys) begin dieting in adolescence. Reported dieting may often reflect dissatisfaction with their body rather than actual calorie restriction. Six to 12 per cent of adolescents choose to become vegetarian, giving them increased independence from family eating patterns.

    Prevalence of eating behaviours and eating problems in adolescence in United Kingdom

    Eating disorders, anorexia nervosa, and bulimia nervosa, are characterised by morbid preoccupation with weight and shape and manifest through distorted or chaotic eating behaviour. This behaviour differentiates these disorders from other types of psychological problems associated with abnormal eating behaviour—such as extreme faddy (selective) eating and various types of food phobia—and from obesity, in which primary psychological mechanisms are rarely implicated or are part of a more complex picture.

    Risk factors for developing eating disorder in adolescence

    Eating disorders

    Studies have found anorexia nervosa to be the third commonest chronic illness of adolescence, affecting 0.5% of adolescent girls. Bulimia nervosa is slightly more common (1%), but the secretive nature of the disorder and adolescents' reluctance to seek help mean that it is often hidden.

    Eating disorders occur in all ethnic groups, and about 90% of cases are in females. Social, psychological (perception of ideal body weight and individual temperament), and genetic mechanisms all contribute to the development of an eating disorder.

    Differentiation of anorexia from bulimia

    Recognition

    The diagnosis of eating disorders in adolescents should take into consideration the context of normal pubertal growth and adolescent development. Although the problem may present as a result of other people's concern, assessment of the young person on their own is necessary to establish diagnosis, risk, and attitude to help. Diagnostic criteria are helpful, but intervention should also be considered in adolescents with severely abnormal eating attitudes and behaviours (such as those who vomit or take laxatives regularly but do not binge) or whose rate of weight loss is of more concern than degree of underweight.

    Diagnostic criteria for anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa*

    For some young people, eating behaviours such as dieting that develop during adolescence can herald the onset of more serious eating problems

    The body mass index (BMI (kg/m2)) is misleading in children and adolescents, and BMI centiles must be used to define underweight. A BMI lower than the 2nd centile indicates serious underweight and should be a trigger for referral. An eating disorder should also be considered if an adolescent fails to attain or maintain a healthy weight, height, or stage of sexual maturity for age.

    Body mass index charts (showing centiles and BMI values for overweight and obesity at age 18) for assessing underweight; the trigger for referring a young person with serious underweight to a specialist is a body mass index lower than or equal to the second centile

    Once the patient has been weighed and their height measured, a few key questions (how much would you like to weigh? how do you feel about your weight? are you or is anyone else worried about your eating or exercising?)—asked in a non-judgmental manner—can be helpful in deciding whether further assessment is needed. An adolescent's distress about being asked about weight and food should heighten concern. If the concern is equivocal, a further appointment within a month is advisable.

    Psychological or behavioural markers of potential eating disorder

    Physical signs of malnutrition and purging include thinning hair, parotid gland swelling, enamel erosion, hypothermia, bradycardia, lanugo hair, dry skin, hypotension, underweight, cold hands and blue/mottled peripheries, poor capillary return, carotenaemia, insensitivity to pain, constipation, amenorrhoea, shrunken breasts

    After an eating disorder is identified, direct challenge or confrontation is unlikely to be helpful. At first presentation aim to (a) feed back findings from physical examination, including degree of underweight if relevant; (b) establish weight monitoring plus a plan to follow if weight falls; (c) discuss psychiatric risk as needed; and (d) provide the family and young person with information about the nature, course, and treatment of eating disorders. In general, the threshold for intervention should be lower for adolescents than for adults.

    Criteria for considering admission to hospital for anorexia nervosa

    Management

    Assessment and management of a young person with an identified eating disorder needs to tackle medical, nutritional, and psychological aspects of care and be delivered by healthcare staff who are knowledgeable about normal adolescent development. When management is shared between primary and secondary care, clear agreement is needed about who is responsible for monitoring patients, and this should be communicated to the patient and his or her family.

    Consequences of eating disorders

    Management of nutritional disturbances in adolescents with eating disorders should take into account the pubertal development and activity level. This is likely to mean that they will need a higher calorie intake for adequate weight gain than the intake required by adult patients with eating disorders.

    Family interventions that directly tackle the eating disorder should be offered to adolescents with anorexia nervosa. Adolescents with bulimia nervosa may best be treated with cognitive behaviour therapy specific to the disorder, with the family included as appropriate. Consideration should be givento the impact of the problem on siblings, who should be involved in treatment when possible.

    For young people under 16 years who present alone with an eating disorder, communication with parents or carers will need to be discussed

    Admission to hospital is necessary if there is acute physical compromise, high psychiatric risk, or after an adequate trial of outpatient treatment. Admission may be to a paediatric ward, an adolescent psychiatric unit, or a specialist eating disorders unit. These facilities should provide skilled feeding with careful physical monitoring (particularly in the first few days) together with psychosocial interventions.

    Percentage of 15 year olds who are obese in Europe and the United States. Adapted from Lissau et al. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2004;158: 27-33

    Rates of obesity have increased substantially among children and adolescents in almost all developed countries in the past two decades. In the United Kingdom, an estimated 7-8% of adolescents of both sexes are seriously obese, with a further 15% being seriously overweight but not obese. The great majority of child and adolescent obesity is primary in origin, due to a long term imbalance between nutritional intake and energy expenditure. Identified monogenic syndromes and secondary causes of obesity probably account for less than 1% of adolescent obesity.

    Conditions associated with obesity

    Obesity in adolescence is a concern because it is associated with current as well as future health problems. Type 2 diabetes and the insulin resistance (metabolic) syndrome are emerging as problems in adolescence. Clinical data suggest that as many as 4% of obese adolescents may have silent type 2 diabetes and a further 30% may have three or more components of the insulin resistance syndrome.

    Assessment

    The most useful definition of obesity is that developed by the International Obesity Task Force, which found that the BMI 99th centile approximately equates to 30 (which in adults is the level linked with adverse health outcomes). As highly muscular young people can have a high BMI yet a low fat mass, it is best to also use a second method of assessing body fat mass, such as waist circumference (for which centiles are now available) or bioimpedance measure (centiles being developed). Those with both a high BMI and a high waist circumference are probably at highest risk.

    Aims of obesity assessment

    Medical assessment

    Family history of obesity and the family risk profile in terms of history of diabetes and components of the insulin resistance syndrome should be noted. Ethnic background should also be considered, as those from a black or South Asian background have a significantly higher risk of the insulin resistance syndrome and diabetes.

    On clinical examination, important signs include fat distribution (generalised or abdominal), acanthosis nigricans (a marker of hyperinsulinism), pubertal development, and blood pressure (measured with an appropriate size cuff). In girls, hirsuitism and acne may suggest polycystic ovarian syndrome. It is useful to search for signs of hypothyroidism and Cushing's syndrome, although obesity is rarely the sole presentation of these conditions in adolescence. Striae and a prominent nuchal fat pad ("buffalo hump") are extremely common in adolescents with simple obesity.

    Important issues in taking a history in adolescent obesity

    Minimal investigations should be done in primary care in adolescents thought to be at high risk (high BMI, abdominal obesity, family history of diabetes or of the insulin resistance syndrome). These include simple biochemistry and haematology tests, fasting insulin and glucose tests, fasting lipid tests, and thyroid function tests.

    Treatment

    The treatment of obesity is notoriously difficult, and a lack of belief that obesity can be treated is widespread. In the United Kingdom, the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health has recently issued excellent brief guidance on managing obesity in primary care.

    Guidelines for treatment of obesity in primary care*

    The most successful obesity treatments are multidisciplinary programmes that urge changes in eating habits and family systems and promote exercise and a reduction in sedentary activities. Dietary interventions alone are unlikely to produce substantial change.

    A treatment plan should be guided by an assessment of risk in both the medical and psychological domains. The psychological domains include emotional overeating, substantial distress, parental mental health, and (rarely) child protection concerns. Substantial weight loss is extremely difficult to achieve, and setting overambitious targets can reduce motivation. Our primary aim in adolescents who are still growing is weight maintenance, thereby producing loss of overweight. As this is achievable only before the end of the pubertal growth spurt, obesity should be treated before puberty if possible. Secondary aims may include improvement in psychological wellbeing; family functioning; and insulin sensitivity, liver function, and lipid concentrations.

    Evidence for prevention of child and adolescent obesity

    The limited effectiveness of treatment has prompted a reconsideration of the role of drugs in severe obesity. No drugs for the treatment of obesity in childhood are currently approved in the United Kingdom or the United States. Metformin, orlistat, and sibutramine may be used in specialist centres. Drug treatment is more effective when combined with a behavioural intervention.

    The most effective ways to prevent and treat obesity are likely to be actions at the macroeconomic level. However, in local communities, individual clinicians may be able to encourage change by promoting simple measures to allow adolescents to participate in sport and activity and eat more healthily.(Dasha Nicholls,)