Orthorexia nervosa

Orthorexia nervosa /ˌɔːrθəˈrɛksiə nɜːrˈvsə/ (also known as orthorexia) is a proposed distinct eating disorder characterized by extreme or excessive preoccupation with eating food believed to be healthy.[1][2][3] The term was introduced in 1997 by American physician Steven Bratman, M.D., who suggests that in some susceptible people, dietary restrictions intended to promote health may paradoxically lead to unhealthy consequences, such as social isolation, anxiety, loss of ability to eat in a natural, intuitive manner, reduced interest in the full range of other healthy human activities, and, in rare cases, severe malnutrition or even death.

In 2009, Ursula Philpot, chair of the British Dietetic Association and senior lecturer at Leeds Metropolitan University,[4] described people with orthorexia nervosa to The Guardian as being "solely concerned with the quality of the food they put in their bodies, refining and restricting their diets according to their personal understanding of which foods are truly 'pure'." This differs from other eating disorders, such as anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa, whereby people focus on the quantity of food eaten.[1]

Orthorexia nervosa is not recognized as an eating disorder by the American Psychiatric Association, and is not mentioned as an official diagnosis in the widely used DSM or any other such authoritative source.[a]

History

In a 1997 article in the magazine Yoga Journal, the American physician Steven Bratman coined the term "orthorexia nervosa" from the Greek ορθο- (ortho, "right" or "correct"), and όρεξις (orexis, "appetite"), literally meaning 'correct appetite', but in practice meaning 'correct diet'.[5] The term is modeled on anorexia, literally meaning "without appetite", as used in the definition of the condition anorexia nervosa. (In both terms, "nervosa" indicates an unhealthy psychological state.) Bratman described orthorexia as an unhealthy fixation with what the individual considers to be healthy eating. Beliefs about what constitutes healthy eating commonly originate in one or another dietary theory such as raw foods veganism or macrobiotics, but are then taken to extremes, leading to disordered eating patterns and psychological and/or physical impairment. Bratman based this proposed condition on his personal experiences in the 1970s, as well as behaviors he observed among his patients in the 1990s. In 2000, Bratman, with David Knight, authored the book Health Food Junkies, which further expanded on the subject.[6]

In 2015, responding to news articles in which the term orthorexia is applied to people who merely follow a non-mainstream theory of healthy eating, Bratman specified the following: "A theory may be conventional or unconventional, extreme or lax, sensible or totally wacky, but, regardless of the details, followers of the theory do not necessarily have orthorexia. They are simply adherents of a dietary theory. The term 'orthorexia' only applies when an eating disorder develops around that theory." [7] Bratman elsewhere clarifies that with a few exceptions, most common theories of healthy eating are followed safely by the majority of their adherents; however, "for some people, going down the path of a restrictive diet in search of health may escalate into dietary perfectionism." [8] Karin Kratina, PhD, writing for the National Eating Disorders Association, summarizes this process as follows: "Eventually food choices become so restrictive, in both variety and calories, that health suffers – an ironic twist for a person so completely dedicated to healthy eating."[9]

Although orthorexia is not recognized as a mental disorder by the American Psychiatric Association, and it is not listed in the DSM-5,[10] as of January 2016, four case reports and more than 40 other articles on the subject have been published in a variety of peer-reviewed journals internationally.[11] According to a study published in 2011, 2/3rd of a sample of 111 Dutch speaking eating disorder specialists felt they had observed the syndrome in their clinical practice.[12]

According to the Macmillan English Dictionary, the word is entering the English lexicon.[13]

Diagnostic criteria

In 2016, formal criteria for orthorexia were proposed in the peer-reviewed journal Eating Behaviors by authors Thom Dunn, PhD of the University of Northern Colorado, and Steven Bratman.[11] These criteria are as follows:

Criterion A. Obsessive focus on "healthy" eating, as defined by a dietary theory or set of beliefs whose specific details may vary; marked by exaggerated emotional distress in relationship to food choices perceived as unhealthy; weight loss may ensue, but this is conceptualized as an aspect of ideal health rather than as the primary goal. As evidenced by the following:

  1. Compulsive behavior and/or mental preoccupation regarding affirmative and restrictive dietary practices believed by the individual to promote optimum health. (Footnotes to this criteria add: Dietary practices may include use of concentrated "food supplements." Exercise performance and/or fit body image may be regarded as an aspect or indicator of health.)
  2. Violation of self-imposed dietary rules causes exaggerated fear of disease, sense of personal impurity and/or negative physical sensations, accompanied by anxiety and shame.
  3. Dietary restrictions escalate over time, and may come to include elimination of entire food groups and involve progressively more frequent and/or severe "cleanses" (partial fasts) regarded as purifying or detoxifying. This escalation commonly leads to weight loss, but the desire to lose weight is absent, hidden or subordinated to ideation about healthy food.

Criterion B. The compulsive behavior and mental preoccupation becomes clinically impairing by any of the following:

  1. Malnutrition, severe weight loss or other medical complications from restricted diet
  2. Intrapersonal distress or impairment of social, academic or vocational functioning secondary to beliefs or behaviors about healthy diet
  3. Positive body image, self-worth, identity and/or satisfaction excessively dependent on compliance with self-defined "healthy" eating behavior.

A diagnostic questionnaire has been developed for orthorexia sufferers, similar to questionnaires for other eating disorders, named the ORTO-15.[14] However, the above cited article by Dunn and Bratman critiques this survey tool as lacking appropriate internal and external validation.

Symptoms

Symptoms of orthorexia nervosa include "obsessive focus on food choice, planning, purchase, preparation, and consumption; food regarded primarily as source of health rather than pleasure; distress or disgust when in proximity to prohibited foods; exaggerated faith that inclusion or elimination of particular kinds of food can prevent or cure disease or affect daily well-being; periodic shifts in dietary beliefs while other processes persist unchanged; moral judgment of others based on dietary choices; body image distortion around sense of physical "impurity" rather than weight; persistent belief that dietary practices are health-promoting despite evidence of malnutrition.".[11]

Epidemiology

Results across scientific findings have yet to find a definitive conclusion to support whether nutrition students and professionals are at higher risk than other population subgroups, due to differing results in the research literature. There are only a few notable scientific works that, in an attempt to explore the breadth and depth of the still vaguely-understood illness, have tried to identify which groups in society are most vulnerable to its onset.[15] This includes a 2008 German study,[16] which based its research on the widespread suspicion that the most nutritionally-informed, such as university nutrition students, are a potential high-risk group for eating disorders, due to a substantial accumulation of knowledge on food and its relationship to health; the idea being that the more one knows about health, the more likely an unhealthy fixation about being healthy can develop. This study also inferred that orthorexic tendencies may even fuel a desire to study the science, indicating that many within this field might suffer from the disorder before commencing the course. However the results found that the students in the study, upon initial embarkation of their degree, did not have higher orthorexic values than other non-nutrition university students, and thus the report concluded that further research is needed to clarify the relationship between food-education and the onset of ON.

Similarly, in a Portuguese study on nutrition tertiary students,[17] the participants' orthorexic scores (according to the ORTO-15 diagnostic questionnaire [18]) actually decreased as they progressed through their course, as well as the overall risk of developing an eating disorder being an insignificant 4.2 percent. The participants also answered questionnaires to provide insight into their eating behaviours and attitudes, and despite this study finding that nutrition and health-science students tend to have more restrictive eating behaviours, these studies however found no evidence to support that these students have "more disturbed or disordered eating patterns than other students"[16] These two aforementioned studies conclude that the more understanding of food one has is not necessarily a risk factor for ON, explaining that the data gathered suggests dietetics professionals are not at significant risk of it.

However, these epidemiologic studies have been critiqued as using a fundamentally flawed survey tool that inflates prevalence rates.[11]

Media reaction

The concept of orthorexia as a newly developing eating disorder has attracted significant media attention.[19][20] [21][22][23]

Biology

There has been no investigation into whether there may be a biological cause specific to orthorexia nervosa. It may be a food-centered manifestation of obsessive-compulsive disorder, which has a lot to do with control.[24] A 2013 study of college students found that orthorexia severity was negatively associated with self-reported executive functioning.[25] This means that the better the student did with cognitively complex tasks, including planning and decision-making, the less likely the student was to have orthorexia.

See also

Notes

References

  1. 1 2 Hill, Amelia (16 August 2009). "Healthy food obsession sparks rise in new eating disorder". The Guardian (London). Retrieved 16 October 2010.
  2. Bratman, Steven (2014) http://www.orthorexia.com/what-is-orthorexia/. Accessed 1/1/2016
  3. Rochman, Bonnie (12 February 2010). "Orthorexia: Can Healthy Eating Be a Disorder?". Time. Retrieved 4 January 2012.
  4. "Supersize vs Superskinny - Expert Profiles - Ursula Philpot". Channel 4. 7 April 2011. Retrieved 19 October 2010.
  5. Bratman, Steven. Health Food Junkie. Yoga Journal 1997; September/October:42-50.
  6. S. Bratman, D. Knight: Health food junkies. Broadway Books, New York, 2000.
  7. Bratman, Steven (2015)http://www.orthorexia.com/healthy-eating-vs-orthorexia/ Accessed 1/1/2016
  8. Bratman, Steven (2015) http://www.mirror-mirror.org/orthorexia-nervosa.htm Accessed 1/1/2016
  9. Kratina, Karin (2015) https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/orthorexia-nervosa Accessed 1/1/2016
  10. Rochman, B. (2010). Orthorexia: Can Healthy Eating Be a Disorder?. TIME.com, Feb 12. Retrieved 2010-02-12.
  11. 1 2 3 4 Dunn, T.M & Bratman, S. (2016). On orthorexia nervosa: A review of the literature and proposed diagnostic criteria. Eating Behaviors, 21, 11 -17.
  12. Vandereycken,W. (2011). Media hype, diagnostic fad or genuine disorder? Professionals'opinions about night eating syndrome, orthorexia, muscle dysmorphia, and emetophobia. Eating Disorders, 19(2), 145–155
  13. Macmillan English Dictionary entry for Orthorexia Nervosa
  14. Donini L, Marsili D, Graziani M, Imbriale M, Cannella C (2005). "Orthorexia nervosa: validation of a diagnosis questionnaire". Eat Weight Disord 10 (2): e28–32. PMID 16682853.
  15. Varga, Márta; Dukay-Szabó, Szilvia; Túry, Ferenc; Eric, F. van Furth (2013-04-12). "Evidence and gaps in the literature on orthorexia nervosa". Eating and Weight Disorders - Studies on Anorexia, Bulimia and Obesity 18 (2): 103–111. doi:10.1007/s40519-013-0026-y. ISSN 1124-4909. Retrieved 2015-04-17.
  16. 1 2 "Eating behaviour and eating disorders in students of nutrition sciences". Retrieved 2015-04-17.
  17. "http://www.nutricionhospitalaria.com/pdf/6695.pdf" (PDF). www.nutricionhospitalaria.com. Retrieved 2015-04-17. External link in |title= (help)
  18. Donini, Prof L. M.; Marsili, D.; Graziani, M. P.; Imbriale, M.; Cannella, C. (2013-10-18). "Orthorexia nervosa: Validation of a diagnosis questionnaire". Eating and Weight Disorders - Studies on Anorexia, Bulimia and Obesity 10 (2): e28–e32. doi:10.1007/BF03327537. ISSN 1124-4909. Retrieved 2015-04-17.
  19. McCandless, David (29 March 2005). "I am an orthorexic". BBC News.
  20. Gray, Emma (26 August 2011). "Orthorexia: Too Much Of A Healthy Thing?". Huffington Post.
  21. Norton, Siobhan. "Orthorexia nervosa: How becoming obsessed with healthy eating can lead to malnutrition". The Independent. The Independent. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  22. Younger, Jordan http://www.refinery29.com/jordan-younger-vegan-orthorexia. Accessed 1/1/2016
  23. McNeily, Claudia. (2015) https://broadly.vice.com/en_us/article/orthorexia-eating-clean-eating-disorder. Accessed 1/1/2016.
  24. Getz, L. (June 2009). "Orthorexia: When eating healthy becomes an unhealthy obsession". Today's Dietitian. Retrieved 2009-10-13.
  25. "A neuropsychological evaluation of orthorexia nervosa". 2013.
  26. "ICD10 Codes". Psychiatr Online. Retrieved 16 October 2010.
  27. "APA Diagnostic Classification". BehaveNet. Retrieved 16 October 2010.
  28. "Disorders Usually First Diagnosed in Infancy, Childhood, or Adolescence". American Psychiatric Association. Retrieved 16 October 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 24, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.