BETHESDA, MD. — A complex set of predisposing, precipitating, and perpetuating factors appears to play a major role in driving the behavioral and neurochemical changes of patients with anorexia or bulimia, Craig Johnson, Ph.D., said at the annual conference of the National Eating Disorders Association.
“A belief system develops, and from that belief system, behaviors emerge. When those behaviors emerge, that also starts to alter the psychology and physiology of the patient and can set up these perpetuating factors so that they feed back on the predisposing and precipitating factors,” said Dr. Johnson, founder and director of the eating disorders program at the Laureate Psychiatric Clinic and Hospital in Tulsa, Okla.
The factors that serve to perpetuate an eating disorder may have little to do with why the illness is continuing. The structural and functional changes to neurochemical pathways in the brain that occurred as a result of the eating disorder behavior will continue to reinforce whatever stimulation was gained from the behavior, he said.
“Without exception, patients that we're taking care of entered into these behaviors to try to fix something in themselves. It was a self-improvement strategy. They thought they were doing a good thing. They were doing the same things they saw encouraged throughout our culture,” Dr. Johnson said.
“Eating disorders are as heritable, have the same level of relative risk, and look to be as genetically mediated as the other major psychiatric illnesses,” Dr. Johnson said. If a relative has anorexia nervosa, other members of the family are 12 times as likely to develop the disorder than members of the general population; if one family member has bulimia nervosa, other members are four times as likely to have it.
About two-thirds of eating disorder patients have a comorbid diagnosis of anxiety or depression, which predates the onset of the eating disorder in about half of such patients, he said. Some patients also have an impaired ability to work with different sets of challenges on neuropsychological tests, although this measure is not correlated with intelligence. These test results “make sense, in terms of what we see happening to them when they move into increasing levels of complexity developmentally, starting with puberty.”
Although he and his colleagues are seeing gender, ethnic, and socioeconomic drift in the epidemiology of anorexia nervosa and bulimia, Dr. Johnson said they are still illnesses that primarily affect white females.
Girls who drop below about 17% body fat lose the secondary sexual characteristics associated with puberty and flatten out their hormone profiles so that they don't “feel” the effects of puberty, he said.
“One of the things we want to know as soon as we can is where the menstrual threshold is. At what point with our weight restoration are we going to be sending them clearly on the other side of puberty?” he said. If patients do not stay in treatment long enough to restore their weight past the menstrual threshold, they will not have dealt adequately with their phobic fear of menstruation, he said.
Patients with bulimia nervosa often report that bingeing on carbohydrate-rich food calms them down, which may be the result of increased blood levels of tryptophan, an amino acid that can pass the blood-brain barrier and is synthesized into serotonin; treatment with SSRIs may make this effect even more pronounced by increasing the amount of serotonin available at synapses, Dr. Johnson said.
Vomiting also causes a sedating effect in bulimic patients because of the release of vasopressin. An autoaddiction to the vasopressin release may explain why binges become smaller and vomiting becomes disproportionate to the volume of food.
Excessive exercise also seems to be a reinforcing and possibly anorexia-inducing behavior. “Running seems to have a unique interaction with restricting behavior that essentially stimulates something very, very toxic for patients that have the more severe forms of the illness. We've found that very few patients are able to successfully return to running in our treatment program.”
Functional MRI studies of the brains of anorexic patients and healthy controls have revealed striking differences in dopamine pathways, suggesting that patients with the disorder do not discriminate between positive and negative feedback and have a blunted response to pleasurable stimuli, noted Dr. Walter Kaye, in a separate presentation during the same session at the conference.
During a gambling task in which participants could win or lose money, trials in which patients with anorexia nervosa won money produced brain activity similar to that of control patients during winning trials, but anorexic patients who lost money also had brain activity similar to that of controls who won money, said Dr. Kaye, research director of the eating disorder program at the University of Pittsburgh.