Anorexia nervosa, or simply anorexia as it is popularly known of, shares the psychological causes that trigger other similar eating disorders, such as bulimia, binge eating and so forth. Similarly to these eating disorders, anorexia is characterized through an extensive psychological body image distortion and excessive weight loss. The modality in which this weight is lost is different than bulimia, where intentional purging through vomiting, laxatives, enemas or other similar methods causes the weight loss. With anorexia, the individual suffering from it wants to achieve "perfect body proportions and weight" through voluntary starvation, excessive exercise, diet pills and unbalanced diets.
Anorexia is probably the most common eating disorder, even more common than bulimia. It is a relatively new condition, since it is considered the "product" of modern society, where individuals are fed a constant stream of visual information on how the "perfect body" should look like and try to attain that goal. Anorexia pops in where we lose track of a balanced way to obtain this body proportions and image and do everything excessively: excessive exercising, excessive dieting and so forth.
All these unhealthy habits leave a deep scar in one's overall health and in severe cases, anorexia can be life threatening. The digestive system (especially the esophagus and stomach), the cardiovascular system (some functions of the heart), muscular tissues and the immune system are all affected by anorexia, each having its own subset of damaging consequences. Besides these, anorexia also affects our hormonal levels, deranging them, disturbs electrolyte balance and generally hinders the body from getting the required amounts of vitamins and minerals.
The condition comes in several levels of graveness, but a patient will be diagnosed with a complete case of anorexia if he or she displays the following patterns:
-- refuses to maintain a normal body weight for his or her age, height and constitution
-- an emotional and psychologically-driven fear of becoming fat (even though the patient may look of average weight) and gaining extra weight
-- denial of the gravity and seriousness of the current low body weight experienced by the patient
-- repeated periods of voluntary starvation, excessive exercise or any of the forms in which anorexia may appear
Even though a patient doesn't particularly display all the above-mentioned factors at the same time, or he displays them at lower intensities, this does not mean that he has fully avoided anorexia. Studies show that almost half of today's teenagers and young men and women ages 20-30 have experienced at least a mild form of anorexia in an emotional drop-down regarding their looks. This eating disorder is still dominant in women, but more and more men tend to give more importance to their looks and tend to develop softer forms of anorexia. The fact that men are considered less emotional than women may also be a factor in the imbalanced proportion between sexes in this particular eating disorder's case. Regardless of your gender however, if you find yourself having a distorted body image, if you tend to evaluate everything revolving around you based on your body shape and weight and if you find yourself practicing one of the above-mentioned weight loss methods, you might be suffering from a hatching form of anorexia that needs to be treated at once.
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