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Feeding Your Brain and Your Body
“It’s a tragedy how often this disease is treated as a mental
illness rather than as one of mind-body,” says Joseph D.
Beasley, M.D., co-author of Food for Recovery and director of
Comprehensive Medical Care in Amityville, New York. Dr. Beasley
advocates vitamin and mineral supplements for people with eating
disorders. “You could have the world’s most renowned
psychotherapists—Freud, Jung and Adler—talk to most of these
patients until the sky turns green, and it won’t do any good
until you get nourishment to the brain and clear the way for
therapy.”
Dr. Beasley is not alone in his beliefs. Contrary to the old
practice of first putting people in therapy and then slowly
reintroducing food, treatment specialists now know that
re-establishing proper nutrition is critical before
psychological therapy can be effective. Many use vitamin and
mineral supplements to help pave the way.
Generally, the supplement of choice is a multivitamin/mineral
that provides 100 percent of the Daily Values of all essential
nutrients while people are relearning to eat real food. Doctors
do not recommend exceeding the Daily Values; they may, however,
recommend supplements of certain individual nutrients,
particularly potassium, calcium, iron, zinc, vitamin A, vitamin
E and the B vitamins.
Note: Experts warn that supplements cannot take the place of
food. The body will not properly absorb and use vitamins and
minerals without also receiving adequate calories.
“A multivitamin/mineral supplement is disadvantageous for the
person who takes it and then thinks she will be okay,” warns
dietitian Cheryl Rock, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Program
in Human Nutrition at the University of Michigan School of
Public Health in Ann Arbor and co-author of Nutrition and Eating
Disorders. “With that mind-set, the illness could drag on for
ten years or more.”
Untreated, 10 to 15 percent of people with anorexia die, usually
after losing at least half of their body weight. And over the
long term, people with bulimia increase their risk of serious
complications, such as abnormal heartbeat and stomach rupture.
So even if you’re taking supplements, it’s important to work
with a specialist to learn how to eat normally again.
Food Factors
Part of the recovery process for people with eating disorders is
making peace with food instead of battling with it. Here are
some tips that many experts believe might prove helpful.
Say no to joe and sugar. It's very common for people with eating
disorders to use caffeine and sugar to boost blood sugar levels
to combat feelings of fatigue and depression, says Joseph D.
Beasley, M.D., co-author of Food for Recovery and director of
Comprehensive Medical Care in Amityville, New York. "It's better
to eat a nutritionally balanced meal than to maintain this cycle
of dramatic ups and downs, which always leaves you feeling
worse," he says.
Go organic. "My patients do better if they stay away from
insecticides, pesticides, steroids and all of the other
chemicals that are found in refined or processed foods," says
Dr. Beasley.
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Balancing Electrolytes
It is well-documented that one of the consequences of eating
disorders is a potentially life-threatening electrolyte
imbalance. Electrolytes are minerals that, when dissolved in the
body’s fluid, become electrically charged. They are responsible
for controlling heart rate and blood pressure.
Potassium and sodium are the body’s major electrolytes. Although
potassium deficiency is not common, rapid weight loss and
dehydration can cause potassium to plummet, leaving you at risk
for serious heart problems, including heart attack.
“People with eating disorders need to have these nutrients
stabilized as quickly as possible,” says Dr. Beasley, who often
recommends supplements of potassium as well as magnesium,
another electrolyte that can lead to serious heart problems if
deficient. “I have never seen an eating disorder patient who
didn’t have major deficits of these nutrients.”
Because too much potassium can make you ill, it is best to get
the Daily Value of this mineral (3,500 milligrams) by eating
fruits and vegetables such as bananas, oranges, spinach and
celery. You can get 885 milligrams just by eating half of a
cantaloupe. Magnesium supplements are available in various
forms, but eating seafood and green, leafy vegetables can help
you easily get your Daily Value of 400 milligrams. People who
have heart or kidney problems or diabetes should check with
their doctors before supplementing these minerals.
Experts recommend that people with eating disorders have a
physician monitor all of their electrolytes: potassium,
magnesium and sodium as well as phosphorus and chloride, which
can also become dangerously low.
Calcium to Protect
Bones
Calcium, an essential mineral in the development and maintenance
of bone health, is one of the nutrients most likely to be
deficient in people with eating disorders. Those who treat
eating disorders say the impact of severe calcium deficiency,
especially when combined with amenorrhea, can be devastating.
“We see 28-year-old women with the bones of 80-year-olds,” says
Tuttle. “They are already in the middle stages of osteoporosis.
It’s sad, but fortunately, sometimes this serious medical issue
is the alarm that helps a woman choose to move forward in her
recovery.” Tuttle notes that doctors often give women with
eating disorders calcium supplements of 1,000 milligrams (the
Daily Value) or more while also attending to the amenorrhea.
“Certainly, it’s important that these girls get sufficient
amounts of calcium in their diets,” says Steven A. Abrams, M.D.,
a research scientist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture
Children’s Nutrition Research Center and associate professor of
pediatrics, both at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. “But
supplements may not be sufficient to resolve osteoporosis if
hormonal inadequacy remains present.”
Drinking skim milk is a good way to increase your dietary
calcium, as just three cups packs more than 1,000 milligrams.
Other sources include broccoli, tofu and fortified orange juice.
Prescriptions for
Healing
Although eating food is absolutely essential to preventing the
damage that eating disorders can do to the body, some doctors
believe that vitamin and mineral supplements can expedite the
process of recovery and healing.
Nutrient Daily
Amount
Calcium
1,000 milligrams
Iron 18 milligrams
Magnesium 400 milligrams
Niacin 20 milligrams
Potassium 3,500 milligrams
Thiamine 1.5 milligrams
Vitamin A 5,000 international units
Vitamin E 30 international units
Zinc 15 milligrams
Plus a Multimineral supplement containing the Daily Values
of all essential vitamins and minerals
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MEDICAL ALERT:
Experts warn that supplements cannot take the place of food in
someone who has an eating disorder. The body will not properly
absorb and use vitamins and minerals without also receiving
adequate calories. It is important to be under a doctor's care
when treating this condition.
People who have heart or kidney problems should check with their
doctors before taking magnesium supplements.
People who have kidney problems or diabetes should check with
their doctors before taking potassium supplements.
If you are taking anticoagulant drugs, you should not take
vitamin E supplements.
Breaking the
Cycle with Zinc
Because zinc deficiency causes symptoms that are similar to
those seen in people with anorexia and bulimia, including weight
loss, depression, stomach bloating and amenorrhea, many
researchers believe that low zinc intake, which is common in
people with eating disorders, helps to perpetuate the illness.
Fortunately, studies have found that zinc supplementation can
help turn the tables. In fact, researchers studying 35 girls
with anorexia at St. Paul’s Hospital in Vancouver found that
those who took just 14 milligrams of zinc a day were able to
achieve their target weight gains twice as fast as those not
taking zinc.
The Daily Value for zinc is 15 milligrams, an amount you can
come close to by eating just one cooked medium-size oyster. You
can also find this essential mineral in roast beef, wheat germ
and whole grains.
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A and E to the
Rescue
Because vitamins A and E are fat-soluble, if you don’t have fat
in your body, you don’t have enough of these vitamins. So in
people with eating disorders, these important nutrients can be
in short supply.
One study, by researchers at Hebrew University in Israel, found
that women with anorexia had significantly lower levels of both
vitamin A and vitamin E in their bodies than women without
anorexia.
“We generally supplement the fat-soluble vitamins in the
beginning of treatment, because these women have no fat,” says
Kathryn J. Zerbe, M.D., vice-president for education and
research and staff psychoanalyst at the Menninger Clinic in
Topeka, Kansas, and author of The Body Betrayed: Women, Eating
Disorders and Treatment. “Fortunately, you don’t have to get
your fat stores up too high before your body is able to store
the vitamins again.”
If you want to get your Daily Value of 5,000 international units
of vitamin A and build your stores of this important vitamin,
two of the best food sources are spinach and pumpkin. And you
can get plenty of beta-carotene, which turns to vitamin A in the
body, by eating carrots, sweet potatoes and other bright orange
and yellow fruits and vegetables as well as dark green, leafy
vegetables.
The Daily Value for vitamin E is 30 international units, and
good dietary sources include whole-grain cereals, eggs and
green, leafy vegetables.
Iron against
Anemia
Because people with eating disorders generally shun red meat and
don’t eat enough to get iron elsewhere, they sometimes develop
iron-deficiency anemia.
“Anemia is caused by not having the fuel to produce energy,
which adds to the fatigue and general lack of interest,” says
Dr. Zerbe. She prefers that women get iron from foods but notes
that supplementation can be helpful for reaching the Daily
Value.
Though red meat is one of the best sources of iron, you can also
get the Daily Value of 18 milligrams by eating clams,
chick-peas, tomato juice, raisins, Cream of Wheat, tofu and
soybeans.
Beat
Depression with B
Depression is such a common thread in eating disorders that many
doctors now use the drug Fluoxetine (Prozac) to treat bulimia.
Many experts who prefer a drug-free approach, however, believe
that depression is a natural consequence of starvation and that
it can be alleviated with proper nutrition.
“If it’s a case of serious depression, we’ll use antidepressant
therapy. But we always try the nutritional route first. Many
people are greatly improved just by getting their nutrition
stable,” says Dr. Beasley. Deficiencies in thiamin and niacin in
particular cause psychological symptoms, including depression,
he notes.
The Daily Value for thiamin is 1.5 milligrams. The vitamin can
be found in virtually all plant and animal foods but especially
in brown rice, seafood and beans. Niacin is plentiful in lean
meats, fish and poultry, and its Daily Value is 20 milligrams.
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Bulimia is completely treatable. The sooner a person begins bulimia treatment, the sooner the recovery. Successful recovery depends on the work of psychiatrists, doctors, dieticians, and the patient.
Bulimia is an eating disorder compels people to binge on food and then purge through self-induced vomiting, diuretics or laxative abuse, or excessive exercise. People with bulimia tend to feel guilty and disgusted about food and fat. Even though most people with bulimia begin at normal weights, they think of themselves as fat. Roughly 90 percent of the people with bulimia are women, and the disorder usually begins a few years after puberty. Genetics, social pressures, and emotional problems like depression, low self-esteem, and extreme perfectionism contribute to bulimia’s development.
Without bulimia treatment, people with bulimia become dehydrated and malnourished. This causes mineral and vitamin deficiencies, resulting in dry skin, nails, and hair. Many people with bulimia are constipated from laxative abuse. Constant vomiting brings up stomach acid that irritates the throat and mouth. Many people with bulimia have heartburn, gum infections, swollen salivary glands, and cavities from the acid eroding tooth enamel. Without treatment, some of side effects, like kidney failure, can become fatal. Dehydration can lower the body’s electrolyte levels, causing heart problems or even death. About 10 percent of people with bulimia will die from it.
Bulimia, however, is completely treatable. The sooner a person begins bulimia treatment, the sooner the recovery. Successful recovery depends on the work of psychiatrists, doctors, dieticians, and the patient. Psychiatrists work with the patient to break the binge-and-purge cycles and to educate the patient about what she is doing to her body and mind. The psychiatrist and patient must identify the triggers of a binging-and-purging episode, as well as help the patient cope with an unhealthy body image. The patient must learn to communicate openly and must increase his or her self-esteem. Doctors work with the patient to treat the effects of bulimia’s dehydration and malnutrition on the body. A dietician helps the patient develop healthy eating habits.
Group therapy and support groups are also helpful for people recovering from bulimia. Information about many support groups can be found online.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bulimia provides detailed information about the causes, symptoms, and effects of bulimia; bulimia treatment and recovery; the relationship between anorexia and bulimia; and information about the “pro bulimia” viewpoint. For more information go to http://www.e-bulimia.com and/or visit our affiliate site at http://www.original-content.net. Bulimia; Original Content.
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