Hey everyone! I was on globeandmail.Com
today and I found an article that I found
interesting and if you wanna read it here
it is!
Anorexia linked to brain's dopamine
receptors
women who suffer from anorexia have
increased chemical activity in a part of
the brain that controls reward and
reinforcement, something that may explain
why they are driven to lose weight but
don't get any pleasure from it, according
to a new study.
Researchers used brain-imaging technology
on 10 women who had recovered from
anorexia and 12 healthy women. In the
anorexic women, they found overactivity by
dopamine receptors in a part of the brain
known as the basal ganglia. Dopamine is a
brain chemical that is associated with
regulating pleasure.
“the take-home message is dopamine in
this area may be very important in how we
respond to stimuli, how we view positive
and negative reinforcement,” said Dr.
Walter kaye, a psychiatry professor at the
university of pittsburgh medical center
and one of the researchers involved in the
study.
Dr. Italian frank, a child psychiatry
fellow at the university of california at
san diego and also a leader of the study,
said the hope is that the research can
lead to the development of drugs to treat
anorexia.
“it's very, very hard to treat. They
recognize it's wrong, but they still don't
eat,” Dr. Frank said. The research was
reported this month on-line in the journal
biological psychiatry.
About 1 per cent of american women suffer
from anorexia, a disease than can also
affect men. It has the highest death rate
of any psychiatric illness, Dr. Kaye
said.
Women suffering from anorexia have
obsessional personalities, avoid harm and
prefer routine, said Dr. Douglas bunnell,
past president of the national eating
disorders association and clinical
director of the renfrew center of
connecticut. These women tend to resist
therapy and have a distorted perception of
themselves, he said.
Although only a small number of women get
anorexia in its purest form, there are
many more people who suffer from some form
of an eating disorder, Dr. Bunnell said.
Making the connection between anorexia and
what's happening in the brain is important
for understanding and treating eating
disorders, he said.
“there's still considerable stigma
attached to these disorders, particularly
for families. People think it reflects
something you did as a parent,” Dr.
Bunnell said.
Dr. Craig johnson, director of the eating
disorders program at laureate psychiatric
hospital in tulsa, okla., said anorexia
was historically viewed as a disease
brought on by its victims or just a diet
gone bad.
“up until this point we have been left
with more sociocultural explanations for
the illness and regretfully that has
resulted in some levels of minimization,
if not glamorization, of the illnesses,”
Dr. Johnson said.
Though the ultimate goal from the latest
study would be to develop treatments for
anorexia, the work may also provide data
important in anorexia prevention and
identifying people at risk of developing
the disease, Dr. Johnson said.
Dr. Frank said researchers still don't
know what is causing the dopamine receptor
to be overactive, but more research may
provide an answer.
Dr. Kaye and other researchers are
involved in a large, multiyear study
looking into a genetic link to the disease
and an eventual cure. Funded with
$10-million from the national institute of
mental health, the study is looking at
hundreds of families that have two or more
members with anorexia.
|
damsel
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 21 May 2005 Posts: 69 Location: Melbourne, Australia
Anorexia Linked to Autism Posted: 07-16-05 20:43pm
I found this article which was kinda
disturbing, but it does make sense sort
of! Its about people who suffer from
anorexia being autistic, or having a mild
form of it anyway. The address is: