Occult Gastrointestinal Bleeding With Anorexia Nervosa
Ms. A was a 16-year-old girl transferred to our hospital with a 3-year history of anorexia nervosa. Three months before her transfer, Ms. A had developed iron deficiency anemia (hemoglobin=7.6 mg/dl, ferritin=2 g/liter). Results of Hemoccult testing were positive, and a HemoQuant test result showed elevation at 11.5 mg hemoglobin/g of stool (0–2.0 normal). Ms. A had been hospitalized for 7 months, was within 5 pounds of her ideal body weight, and had not menstruated for 1 year. Symptoms included ritualistic and compulsive exercising but not surreptitious vomiting, laxative abuse, or other behaviors that could contribute to gastrointestinal blood loss.An upper gastrointestinal fluoroscopic examination, small bowel follow-through, barium enema, esophagogastroduodenoscopy, small bowel enteroclysis, proctoscopy, colonoscopy, abdominal CT scan, pelvic ultrasound, and a radioactive Meckel’s scan were all normal. The iron deficiency was considered to be of unknown etiology; Ms. A’s hemoglobin returned to normal with iron supplementation.Six weeks after admission to our hospital, Ms. A had hypochromic, normocytic anemia (hemoglobin=9.6 mg/dl) and had lost 12 pounds. Results of two of three Hemoccult tests were positive. Iron and ferritin studies were nondiagnostic.Records from the transferring facility and our hospital indicated that Ms. A was found running in place several times in her bedroom or bathroom. Upon questioning, she admitted to regularly running in place for at least 2 hours during the night.Running was discontinued, and Ms. A’s activities were intensively monitored. Results of six of six Hemoccult tests were negative over the following 2 months. Hemoglobin normalized with iron supplementation and an improved diet.
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