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EATING DISORDERS

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EATING DISORDERS RNSG 2213 Topics in this Presentation Covered: Anorexia Nervosa Bulimia Nervosa Not Covered: Overeating and Binge Eating Disorders Obesity and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EATING DISORDERS


1
EATING DISORDERS
  • RNSG 2213

2
Topics in this Presentation
  • Covered
  • Anorexia Nervosa
  • Bulimia Nervosa
  • Not Covered
  • Overeating and Binge Eating Disorders
  • Obesity and Bariatrics

3
Anorexia Nervosa
4
Anorexia Nervosa Incidence and Characteristics
  • Females, 90 (male numbers are growing)
  • Affects 3.7 of women
  • Less common than bulimia
  • 6 to 20 die as a result of the illness
  • Higher death rate than any other psychiatric
    disorder

5
Anorexia Nervosa Characteristics, contd
  • Onset
  • adolescence to early adulthood
  • age of onset is decreasing
  • often insidious
  • occurs during important life transitions
  • No loss of appetite
  • Deliberate Weight loss

6
Cultural Factors and Influences
  • Weight and Shape
  • very important in US culture
  • Unrealistic ideals
  • culture of thinness
  • e.g. computer graphics make thin models even
    thinner

7
Beauty Queens
2008
1920s
8
Cultural Factors Influences, contd
  • Epidemic of obesity and dieting
  • thinness self-control
  • ? Preoccupation with fitness

9
DSM IV-TR Criteria for Anorexia Nervosa
  • Refusal to maintain normal weight
  • Intense fear of gaining weight, even if
    underweight
  • Body image disturbances
  • In female adults or adolescents, absence of at
    least 3 consecutive menstrual cycles
  • Types are Restricting and Binge/Purging

10
Psychosocial and Family Factors
  • Fears of becoming adult or independent
  • Rigid, competitive, perfectionistic
  • Anxious, compulsive and obsessive
  • the eating disorder is a way to have control
  • Compliant people pleasers

11
Psychosocial and Family Factors, contd
  • Correlates with childhood sexual abuse
  • Family characteristics that correlate with
    anorexia
  • over-controlling or rigid
  • emphasis on appearance
  • may have unusual eating habits

12
Food-Related Behaviors in Anorexia Nervosa
  • Restricting intake, fasting
  • Hoarding food
  • Highly avoidant of certain foods
  • Preoccupation with calories, meals, recipes, etc.
  • Preparing/serving elaborate meals for others
  • Rituals before and during eating
  • become compulsions
  • ?Many characteristic behaviors of Anorexia
    Nervosa are associated primarily with low
    weight/starvation symptoms

13
How Anorexics Get Rid of the Weight
  • Use of laxatives and enemas
  • Exercise

14
Purging Behavior in Anorexia
  • Purgers and vomiters
  • Eat normally in a social situations
  • Amount of food eaten is not excessive
  • Purge if no success with severe restricting
  • (Not on the test)

15
Physical Assessment Metabolic Consequences
16
Anorexia More Metabolic Consequences
  • GI slowed peristalsis, delayed gastric emptying
  • Feel full much longer
  • Reproductive loss of menses, loss of libido
  • ? development of secondary sex characteristics
  • Osteopenia or Osteoporosis bone mass loss may be
    irreversible

17
Other Physical Assessment Data
  • Muscle wasting, weakness and fatigue
  • Dehydration
  • Pitting edema
  • Electrolyte imbalance secondary to laxative,
    enema or emetic abuse and from starvation
  • Hypocalcemia, hypokalemia

18
Anorexia Complications
  • Heart failure, life threatening arrhythmias
  • Cardiac ventricular dilation
  • Decreased thickness of the ventricular wall
  • Decreased oxygenation of
  • cardiac muscle
  • Renal failure
  • Metabolic alkalosis or acidosis

19
Complication of Treatment Re-feeding Syndrome
  • Severe Fluid Shifts from too rapid
    re-introduction of food
  • Cardiovascular, neurological and hematologic
    complications
  • Interventions
  • Refeed slowly
  • Close supervision of physical status

20
Nursing Diagnosis Critical thinking
  • Write a nursing diagnosis for each of these
    consequences of Anorexia Nervosa
  • 1) Hides food and is dishonest about intake
  • 2) Heart Rate is persistently 48 bpm
  • 3) Uses laxatives several times a week to
    achieve wt. loss

21
Nursing Diagnosis Critical thinking Some
possible choices
  • 1a) Ineffective coping or
  • 1b) R/F nutrition less than body requirements
    r/t dishonesty about intake and compensatory
    behaviors
  • 2) R/F falls r/t hypotension
  • 3a) Fluid volume deficit r/t laxative overuse
  • 3b) Constipation (or Diarrhea) r/t altered
    gastric motility

22
Mental Health Problems Associated with Anorexia
  • Anxiety
  • If perceives loss of control over eating will
    lose weight by any means, e.g. exercising,
    laxatives, enemas or emetics
  • Sexual dysfunctions, low sex drive
  • Feelings of helplessness, inadequacy
  • Obsessive-compulsive Disorder

23
Mental Health Disorders Associated with Anorexia
Nervosa, contd
  • Major Depression
  • (Dx and tx only after weight gain is established)
  • Substance abuse laxatives and enemas rather than
    alcohol or illegal drugs
  • Personality disorders

24
Neurobiology of Anorexia
  • High levels of serotonin
  • SSRIs are not effective
  • If used should not be started until weight
  • restoration is established

25
Bulimia Nervosa
26
Bulimia Nervosa
  • Age of onset adolescence to young adulthood
  • Primarily in women
  • 4 of young adults
  • Symptoms overlap with Anorexia, making diagnosis
    difficult

27
Bulimia Characteristics
  • Often develops after period of dieting
  • Weight loss NOT a characteristic sign of bulimia
  • Purging develops as a way to compensate for
    massive amounts of food eaten
  • Restrictive eating...bingeingpurging
  • cycle

28
Binge Eating Episode
  • Precipitated by feelings of lack of control or
    anxiety
  • Often done in secret
  • High calorie-High carbohydrate intake
  • Consumed in less than 2 hours
  • Become addicted to the high experienced when
    eating

29
Purging Compensatory Behavior for Binge Eating
  • May use manual stimulation, laxatives, and/or
    emetics
  • Over time, self-induced vomiting occurs with
    minimal stimulation
  • Post-purging sense of relief, calm

30
Consequences and Complications of Purging
  • Electrolyte imbalances
  • Metabolic Acidosis
  • Metabolic Alkalosis
  • Cardiomyopathy
  • Enlarged salivary glands
  • Erosion of dental enamel
  • Russells sign
  • Pancreatitis

31
(No Transcript)
32
Etiology Psychosocial and Family Factors in
Bulimia
  • Depression, low self-esteem
  • Shame will hide the excessive eating
  • Associated family characteristics
  • Mood disorders
  • Lack of nurturing
  • food is a form of self-nurturing
  • Substance abuse
  • Family conflict or disorganization
  • evidence Bulimia is a response to chaos

33
Etiology Neurobiology of Bulimia
  • Lowered serotonin activity
  • Binge eating raises levels of serotonin
  • Treat with SSRI, particularly fluoxetine (Prozac)

34
Management of Eating Disorders
  • Goals for client with Anorexia Nervosa
  • Increase weight to 90 of average body weight for
    height
  • Increase self-esteem
  • Decrease need for perfection (provided by
    thinness)
  • Goals for client with Bulimia
  • Stabilize weight without purging

35
Management of Eating Disorders, contd
  • Both Anorexia and Bulimia
  • Inpatient treatment for medical stabilization and
    dietary management
  • Long-term outpatient tx. addresses psychosocial
    issues

36
Interventions Starvation Phase of Anorexia
  • Assess labs
  • Monitor intake/output
  • Assess for cardiovascular, neurological
    complications
  • Refeed slowly careful dietary supervision
  • Intravenous lines and feeding tubes if
    client refuses food

37
Nurse Patient Relationship
  • Anorexia Nervosa
  • Usually forced into tx.
  • Tx means loss of control over eating
  • Nurse is the enemy
  • Bulimia Nervosa
  • More likely to want help break the cycle
  • More likely to enter treatment of their own
    volition
  • Tendency to manipulate
  • Hide the degree of the problem

38
Critical Thinking Nursing Interventions
  • Give rationales for interventions listed on next
    slide ?

39
Some Interventions for Eating Disorders
  • Do not confront denial, but encourage feelings
    identification
  • Honesty
  • Collaborate
  • TEACH patient about their disorder
  • Assist to identify positive qualities
  • Eat with the client
  • Set appropriate limits
  • Encourage decision -making concerning issues
    other than food
  • Behavior modification
  • Patient input
  • Rewards for weight gain

40
Psychopharmacology
  • Anxiolytics when re-feeding is occurring
  • SSRI for Bulimia
  • Equally effective for depressed and non-depressed
    patients
  • Psychotherapy for Anorexia
  • Use antidepressant for co-morbid severe depression

41
Milieu Management
  • Orient to program and goals of treatment
  • Warm nurturing environment
  • Convey an understanding of their fears
  • Close observation during and after meals
  • Do we let these patient go to the rest room
    alone?
  • Should we let them go to their room right after a
    meal?
  • Nonjudgmental confrontation of eating disordered
    behavior
  • CONSISTENCY
  • Encourage the patient to talk to staff when they
    feel the need to purge

42
Milieu Management, contd
  • Dietitian individual planning and consultation
  • Weighing protocols
  • Group Therapy
  • Which groups would be best for clients with
    eating disorders?

43
Art Therapy Expressive Arts
Meditation Relaxation
Movement Therapy
44
Other Interventions
  • Family Involvement teaching and family therapy
  • Follow-up therapy (outpatient)
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