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Mental Health

Eating Disorders

Also known as: Eating Disorders (Anorexia Nervosa, Bulimia Nervosa, Binge Eating Disorder)

Eating disorders are serious mental health conditions characterised by persistent disturbances in eating behaviour and related thoughts and emotions. They can have life-threatening medical consequences.

Quick answers about Eating Disorders

What is Eating Disorders?
Eating disorders are serious mental health conditions characterised by persistent disturbances in eating behaviour and related thoughts and emotions. They can have life-threatening medical consequences.
What are the common symptoms of Eating Disorders?
Common symptoms of eating disorders include severe food restriction or binge eating, distorted body image, purging behaviours, and obsessive calorie counting. Severity and combination of symptoms vary between individuals, and not everyone with eating disorders experiences every symptom.
How is Eating Disorders diagnosed?
Clinical assessment using DSM-5 criteria. Medical evaluation including ECG, blood electrolytes, bone density, and nutritional markers. Psychological assessment for co-occurring conditions.
When should I see a doctor about Eating Disorders?
Seek immediate help for rapid weight loss, fainting, chest pain, vomiting blood, or suicidal thoughts. Eating disorders have the highest mortality rate of any mental illness.
Can an AI symptom checker help with Eating Disorders?
Yes. Symplicured's AI symptom checker can help you triage eating disorders symptoms in under five minutes. Describe what you're feeling — by text, voice, or photo — and the AI asks targeted follow-up questions before producing a differential diagnosis reviewed against clinical guidelines by our Medical Review Board. It can also help you decide whether self-care, a telemedicine visit, or in-person urgent care is the right next step. Symplicured is free, works in 18 languages, and does not replace a doctor's evaluation.

Understanding Eating Disorders

Eating disorders affect approximately 9% of the global population and have the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric condition. Anorexia nervosa has a mortality rate 5-6 times higher than the general population.

They are not lifestyle choices but serious biopsychosocial illnesses influenced by genetics, neurobiology, psychology, and environment. Early intervention significantly improves outcomes.

The three main types are anorexia nervosa (restriction), bulimia nervosa (binge-purge), and binge eating disorder (bingeing without purging — the most common eating disorder).

Common Symptoms

People with Eating Disorders often experience the following symptoms.

Severe Weight Loss (Anorexia)

Significant weight loss or failure to gain expected weight, with intense fear of gaining weight.

Binge-Purge Cycles (Bulimia)

Episodes of eating large amounts followed by compensatory purging (vomiting, laxatives, excessive exercise).

Binge Eating Episodes

Eating large quantities in a short time with loss of control, without purging, leading to shame and distress.

Medical Complications

Electrolyte imbalances, cardiac arrhythmias, dental erosion, oesophageal tears, and osteoporosis.

Risk Factors

Certain factors may increase your likelihood of developing Eating Disorders.

Female sex

Adolescence and young adulthood

Perfectionism and anxiety

History of dieting or weight stigma

Treatment Options

Common approaches to managing eating disorders. Always consult a healthcare provider for personalized treatment.

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)

First-line psychological treatment, particularly for bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorder.

Family-Based Treatment (FBT)

The leading treatment for adolescent anorexia nervosa, empowering parents to support recovery.

Nutritional Rehabilitation

Structured meal plans and weight restoration for anorexia, often requiring multidisciplinary team.

Medications

SSRIs for bulimia and binge eating. Lisdexamfetamine for binge eating disorder. No effective medication for anorexia.

How It's Diagnosed

Clinical assessment using DSM-5 criteria. Medical evaluation including ECG, blood electrolytes, bone density, and nutritional markers. Psychological assessment for co-occurring conditions.

When to See a Doctor

Seek immediate help for rapid weight loss, fainting, chest pain, vomiting blood, or suicidal thoughts. Eating disorders have the highest mortality rate of any mental illness.

Prevention Strategies

Steps that may help reduce the risk of developing or worsening eating disorders.

Promote positive body image

Avoid weight-based teasing and stigma

Early intervention for disordered eating patterns

Support mental health in adolescence

Potential Complications

If left untreated or poorly managed, eating disorders may lead to:

  • Cardiac arrest (electrolyte imbalances)
  • Osteoporosis
  • Kidney failure
  • Death (highest mortality of psychiatric illnesses)

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you recover from an eating disorder?

Yes. Full recovery is possible with appropriate treatment. Early intervention improves outcomes significantly.

Are eating disorders only about food?

No. They are complex mental health conditions involving control, self-worth, trauma, and emotional regulation.

Can men have eating disorders?

Yes. Approximately 25% of eating disorder cases are in males, though they are underdiagnosed.

Think you might have Eating Disorders?

Get a personalized AI-powered symptom assessment in under 3 minutes. Free, private, and available in 15+ languages.

This information is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

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