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2006-11-14 15:33:36 · 10 answers · asked by ashley n 1 in Health Diseases & Conditions Other - Diseases

10 answers

The list of signs and symptoms mentioned in various sources for Anorexia includes those listed below. Note that Anorexia symptoms usually refers to various symptoms known to a patient, but the phrase Anorexia signs may refer to those signs only noticable by a doctor:
Loss of appetite
Weight loss
Obession with food and eating
Abusing other weight control methods
Menstrual abnormalities
Certain physical symptoms
See also symptoms of Anorexia Nervosa for more detail
Other causes of these symptoms: Click on any of the above symptoms to see a full list of other diseases, toxin, or drugs side effect causes of that symptom.
A Person with Anorexia may…

Eat only 'safe' foods, usually those low in calories and fat
Have odd rituals, such as cutting food into small pieces
Spend more time playing with food than eating it
Cook meals for others without eating · Engage in compulsive exercising
Dress in layers to hide weight loss
Spend less time with family and friends, become more isolated, withdrawn, and secretive
(Source: excerpt from Fact Sheet Eating Disorders: NWHIC)
Symptoms of anorexia nervosa include:

Resistance to maintaining body weight at or above a minimally normal weight for age and height

Intense fear of gaining weight or becoming fat, even though underweight

Disturbance in the way in which one's body weight or shape is experienced, undue influence of body weight or shape on self-evaluation, or denial of the seriousness of the current low body weight
Infrequent or absent menstrual periods (in females who have reached puberty)
(Source: excerpt from Eating Disorders Facts About Eating Disorders and the Search for Solutions: NIMH)

2006-11-14 15:37:08 · answer #1 · answered by It's Me! 5 · 0 0

1) People keep telling you you're too thin but you don't believe them or you think they're just jealous.
2) You wish it wasn't necessary to eat to live, or that you could just take a pill instead. If you do eat, you wish you hadn't, or you have special rituals that surround eating.
3) Your clothes size keeps getting smaller, and/or you start layering on more than 2 layers.
4) You are always cold.
5) Your skin is loose. If you pinch up some on your forearm and you can get it to pull up more than 1/2 an inch it's loose.
6) Late stages, your hair starts to get thin and may start to fall out.
7) The parts on you that look biggest are your shoulders, elbows, wrists, hips, knees, and ankles.
8) You think you are fat.
9) You never stop trying to get thinner.
10) Try this test. Take a string and tie two ends together into a circle that you think is about the size of your hips. Place this on the floor and make it oval. Step in and pull it up around your hips. It might surprise you!

2006-11-14 15:49:26 · answer #2 · answered by musemessmer 6 · 0 0

when you stand next to a pine tree sapling and noone can see you, you might be anorexic.

If you are standing on one leg and someone hangs their coat on your head, you might be anorexic.

If you eat one potato chip and then say, "oh, I'm stuffed!", you might be anorexic.

OK, I'm done.

The symptoms of anorexia nervosa are:

--Having an intense fear of gaining weight.
--Restricting food or types of food, such as food that contains any kind of fat or sugar.
--Weighing less than 85% of your expected body weight. (In a child or teen, losing or not gaining weight during a growth spurt is a concern.)
--Seeing your body as overweight, even though you are underweight.
--Overexercising.
--Being secretive around food and not seeing or wanting to talk about having a problem with eating.

I hope you don't have this. I've known a couple of girls who went through this and the thing was they were absolutely beautiful girls! Just for some reason in their mind they felt they were too fat. These girls were both athletes with very well toned bodies. I wished they would have come to me I could have saved them from going through what they did. They're fine now but seeing them so thin was scary! I bet you look just fine.

2006-11-14 15:39:47 · answer #3 · answered by viewAskew 5 · 0 1

Anorexia is an eating disorder where people starve themselves. Anorexia usually begins in young people around the onset of puberty. Individuals suffering from anorexia have extreme weight loss. Weight loss is usually 15% below the person's normal body weight. People suffering from anorexia are very skinny but are convinced that they are overweight. Weight loss is obtained by many ways. Some of the common techniques used are excessive exercise, intake of laxatives and not eating.
Anorexics have an intense fear of becoming fat. Their dieting habits develop from this fear. Anorexia mainly affects adolescent girls.
People with anorexia continue to think they are overweight even after they become extremely thin, are very ill or near death. Often they will develop strange eating habits such as refusing to eat in front of other people. Sometimes the individuals will prepare big meals for others while refusing to eat any of it.
The disorder is thought to be most common among people of higher socioeconomic classes and people involved in activities where thinness is especially looked upon, such as dancing, theater, and distance running.


Symptoms of Anorexia:
There are many symptoms for anorexia, some individuals may not experience all of they symptoms. The symptoms include: Body weight that is inconsistent with age, build and height (usually 15% below normal weight).
Other symptoms include:
Loss of at least 3 consecutive menstrual periods (in women).
Not wanting or refusing to eat in public.
Other symptoms are: anxiety, weakness, brittle skin, shortness of breath, obsessiveness about calorie intake


Medical Consequences of anorexia:
There are many medical risks associated with anorexia. They include: shrunken bones, mineral loss, low body temperature, irregular heartbeat, permanent failure of normal growth, development of osteoporosis and bulimia nervosa.
Continued use of laxatives is harmful to the body. It wears out the bowel muscle and causes it to decrease in function. Some laxatives contain harsh substances that may be reabsorbed into your system.

Statistics:
One percent of teenage girls in the U.S. develop anorexia nervosa and up to 10% of those may die as a result.

Warning signs of anorexia:
Deliberate self-starvation with weight loss
Fear of gaining weight
Refusal to eat
Denial of hunger
Constant exercising
Greater amounts of hair on the body or the face
Sensitivity to cold temperatures
Absent or irregular periods
Loss of scalp hair
A self-perception of being fat when the person is really too thin

Hope this helped!

2006-11-14 15:48:42 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Anorexia is defined as not eating. It is, itself, a symptom.

Anorexia Nervosa, the mental condition, is when you refuse to eat in order to lose weight.

2006-11-14 15:36:06 · answer #5 · answered by Privratnik 5 · 1 1

People who have anorexia try to hide their condition, So others may not notice the signs and symptoms, of the eating disorder.

*Dramatic weight loss,,refusal to maintain, a minimal normal weight for one's age and height.

*Basing self - worth on body weight and body image

*Frequent skipping meals, with excuses for not eating

*Eating only a few foods, especially those low in fat and calories

*Making meals for others, but not eating the meals themselves

*Frequent weighing of oneself and focusing on tiny flunctuations in weight

*Wearing baggy clothes to cover up thinness

*Frequent looking in the mirror for flaws

*Avoidance of social gatherings where food is involved

*Even when thin, complaining about being overweight

*In females, missing three consecutive menstrual periods; In males decreased sexual disire

2006-11-14 16:04:46 · answer #6 · answered by AshleyS. 3 · 0 0

It varies widely from one person to the next. The most basic signs are rapid weight loss, sudden rejection of family or friends, excessive exercising, low self-esteem, and heavy levels of depression.

2006-11-14 19:29:57 · answer #7 · answered by David 5 · 0 0

it varies, but

if you aren't fat, (and possibly know this) and look in the mirror and think, i'm so fat
not eating, saying your not hungry when you are, obsessing over certain parts of your body, feeling insecure, worrying about your weight

if you think you have anorexia, you need to talk to someone.

2006-11-14 15:38:35 · answer #8 · answered by elodie 2 · 0 1

not eating, vomitting after eating, thinking you are fat when you are under weight. taking laxatives to lose weight. excessive exercise

2006-11-14 15:36:47 · answer #9 · answered by Abby 6 · 0 1

being really skinny

2006-11-14 15:34:39 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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