Eating Disorders Not Otherwise Specified (ED-NOS)
Some people experience a mix of symptoms. A woman might display
all the symptoms of anorexia, but might still menstruate. A man
might appear to have anorexia, but not have the abnormally low sex
hormones usually associated with it. Others might lose weight but
remain within their normal weight range. On the other hand, some
people might have all the symptoms of bulimia but won’t binge
and/or purge.
People with ED-NOS might:
- Purge, use laxatives or over-exercise
- Chew food repeatedly and often spit it out rather than
swallow it
- Binge-eat regularly but compensate for it through laxatives
or vomiting
- Remain within their normal weight range despite disordered
eating
Other types of disordered eating include:
Dieting
Dieting involves restricting what we eat or how much we eat in
order to lose weight. It can lead to eating disorders because it
encourages an obsession with food and weight, and suggests that
thinness is an ideal to which we must strive. The effects of
dieting include:
- A preoccupation with food
- A strong desire to binge
- Mood changes, like increased irritability and depression
- Increased nail biting or other self-soothing behaviours
- Lowered self-esteem when diets inevitably fail
- Social withdrawal
- Reduction in sexual interest
- Impaired concentration and judgment
- Decreased body temperature, heart rate and respiration
- Lowered metabolism and thus weight gain
- Increased use of salt, spices, coffee tea, chewing gum,
cigarettes
Disordered Eating
Abnormal eating that includes behaviours seen in eating
disorders such as anorexia and bulimia, as well as chronic
restrained eating, compulsive eating and habitual dieting is
considered Disordered Eating. It includes irregular, chaotic
eating patterns, where physical hunger and satiety (fullness) are
often ignored. Disordered Eating creates negative effects on
emotional, social and physical health and may cause depression,
fatigue, decreased mental functioning and concentration, and can
lead to malnutrition with risk to bone health, physical growth and
brain development.
Night-Eating Syndrome
Not formally defined as an eating disorder, individuals who
tend to limit their eating during the day, and eat at night to
compensate are said to have Night-Eating Syndrome. This pattern of
self-starvation commonly causes sleep disturbances. Stress, sleep
and hunger hormones may contribute to thissyndrome. Although rare,
a slightly higher percentage of obese individuals and those with
bulimia experience it. Symptoms include:
- Little or no appetite for breakfast
- Eating more than half of one's daily food intake after
dinner, over a period of at least three months
- Feeling tense, anxious, upset or guilty while eating
- Having difficulty falling asleep or staying asleep
- Eating continually in the evening rather than bingeing in
relatively short episodes
- Experiencing guilt and shame from eating rather than
enjoyment.
Excerpts from National Eating
Disorders Information Centre
www.nedic.ca |