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Published Online: 15 July 2024

Why Don’t You Just Eat? Neuroscience and the Enigma of Eating Disorders

Abstract

Eating disorders are severe psychiatric illnesses that are associated with high mortality. Research has identified environmental, psychological, and biological risk factors that could contribute to the psychopathology of eating disorders. Nevertheless, the patterns of self-starvation, binge eating, and purging behaviors are difficult to reconcile with the typical mechanisms that regulate appetite, hunger, and satiety. Here, the authors present a neuroscience and human brain imaging–based model to help explain the detrimental and often persistent behavioral patterns seen in individuals with eating disorders and why it is so difficult to overcome them. This model incorporates individual motivations to change eating, fear conditioning, biological adaptations of the brain and body, and the development of a vicious cycle that drives the individual to perpetuate those behaviors. This knowledge helps to explain these illnesses to patients and their families, and to develop more effective treatments, including biological interventions.

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Information

Published In

History

Published in print: Summer 2024
Published online: 15 July 2024

Keywords

  1. Feeding and Eating Disorders
  2. Anorexia Nervosa
  3. Bulimia Nervosa
  4. Fear Conditioning
  5. Dopamine
  6. Circuitry

Authors

Affiliations

Claire K. Pinson, B.A.
School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, California (Pinson); Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, UCSD Eating Disorders Center for Treatment and Research, and Rady Children’s Hospital, San Diego, California (Frank).
Guido K.W. Frank, M.D. [email protected]
School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, California (Pinson); Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, UCSD Eating Disorders Center for Treatment and Research, and Rady Children’s Hospital, San Diego, California (Frank).

Notes

Send correspondence to Dr. Frank ([email protected]).

Competing Interests

The authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

Funding Information

Supported by the National Institute of Mental Health grants MH096777 and MH103436 (to Dr. Frank).

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