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Gastrointestinal complications in a patient with eating disorders

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Abstract

Eating disorders are frequently observed in young people. They can induce major complications involving several organs, either directly or through protein energy malnutrition. Gastrointestinal problems are the most common and somewhat different in restrictive and bulimic anorexia. Delayed gastric emptying prevails in restrictive anorexia, with slower intestinal transit and atrophy of the smooth muscles of the gastrointestinal tract. In bulimic anorexia, vomiting is the cause of several oesophageal and gastric lesions, from oesophagitis to perforation of the oesophagus or stomach. C.G. is a 16-year old boy who weighs 41.8 kg, is 174 cm tall and has a BMI 13.7 (kg/m2). At 14 he started to suffer from restrictive anorexia, then bulimic anorexia for the last two months. The day before admission, the patient ate a large quantity of “sfoglia-telle” in about 2 hours during a bulimic crisis. After 8 hours, he had spontaneous vomiting, malaise, abdominal tension and slight mental confusion. Physical examination showed a tense and tender abdomen with infrequent peristalsis, mental confusion and dehydration. Laboratory evaluation confirmed dehydration (serum albumin 5.7 g/dL); a plain abdomen film showed marked gastrectasia. Instrumental examinations (abdominal CT scan, upper endoscopy) confirmed the diagnosis of gastrectasia with tight pyloric stenosis.

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De Caprio, C., Pasanisi, F. & Contaldo, F. Gastrointestinal complications in a patient with eating disorders. Eat Weight Disord 5, 228–230 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03354451

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03354451

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