Decreased caloric intake in normal-weight patients with bulimia: comparison with female volunteers
Open Access
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
- Vol. 49 (1) , 86-92
- https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/49.1.86
Abstract
Patients with bulimia (binge-purge syndrome) frequently complain that they consume a very restrictive diet to avoid gaining weight. To investigate this claim, 23 hospitalized bulimic patients were assessed daily for body weight, caloric intake, macronutrient diet content, activity measures, and body composition estimates during weight-stable periods. Bulimic patients ate fewer kilocalories per kilogram body weight (22.1 +/- 4.6 kcal/kg) than did age-matched normal women (29.7 +/- 6.5 kcal/kg) but had similar activity levels and body composition. Clinical variables, such as history of laxative abuse, anorexia, or obesity, and physiological characteristics, such as body weight, activity level, or dietary content, could not account for this difference in caloric consumption. Bulimic patients tended to eat a diet lower in fat and higher in protein than did control subjects. These results agree with observations of increased efficiency of caloric utilization in obese patients and support patient complaints of a tendency to gain weight easily.This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Indices of relative weight and obesityPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Metabolic and endocrine indices of starvation in Bulimia: A comparison with anorexia nervosaPsychiatry Research, 1985
- Thermic effects of food and exercise in lean and obese womenMetabolism, 1983
- Anthropometrics revisitedProceedings of the Nutrition Society, 1982
- A study of the thermic responses to a meal and to a sympathomimetic drug (ephedrine) in relation to energy balance in manBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1982
- The energetic efficiency of metabolismProceedings of the Nutrition Society, 1981
- Suppression of Sympathetic Nervous System During FastingScience, 1977
- ‘Dieters’ and ‘vomiters and purgers’ in anorexia nervosaPsychological Medicine, 1977
- Day-to-day variations in body-weight of young womenBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1965
- Measurement of change in body-weightBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1964