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Published Online: March 1944

ANOREXIA NERVOSA: METABOLISM AND ITS RELATION TO PSYCHOPATHOLOGIC REACTIONS

Publication: American Journal of Psychiatry

Abstract

In four patients with anorexia nervosa, investigations were made on (a) the relation of the psychopathologic reactions to the somatic changes, and (b) the energy metabolism and the absorption and metabolism of food stuffs.
Weight changes were found to be the resultant of the caloric intake and energy output which were influenced considerably by anxiety and resentment. Anxiety was manifested physiologically by a change from a slow pulse to tachycardia, increased hyperkinesis, and decrease in glucose tolerance without characteristic changes in appetite.
Observations on the metabolism of various dietary constituents gave no evidence of a "primary" metabolic disorder. The balance of energy changes was similar to that seen in inanition. During most periods the intake of calories was abnormally low, but even with a diet which would have been adequate for the average normal person weight could be lost because of muscular overactivity induced by anxiety. Thus, most of the symptoms of anorexia nervosa can persist without there being an actual anorexia.

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Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 681 - 685

History

Published in print: March 1944
Published online: 1 April 2006

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Affiliations

S. M. SMALL
The Departments of Medicine and Psychiatry, Cornell University Medical College, the Russell Sage Institute of Pathology, and The New York Hospital, New York.
A. T. MILHORAT
The Departments of Medicine and Psychiatry, Cornell University Medical College, the Russell Sage Institute of Pathology, and The New York Hospital, New York.

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