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Description of characteristics and outcomes of a cohort of patients with severe and enduring eating disorders (SE-ED).

Ana Piñar-GutierrezElena Dios-FuentesPablo Remón-RuizDiego Del Can-SánchezAntonio Vázquez-MorejónMarta López-NarbonaJavier Dastis-Rodríguez de GuzmánEva Venegas-MorenoAlfonso Soto-Moreno
Published in: Journal of eating disorders (2021)
Level III: Evidence obtained from well-designed cohort or case-control analytic studies. At present, the criteria for severe and enduring eating disorders (SE-ED) are not sufficiently clearly defined. It has been calculated that approximately 20% of patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) and 10% of patients with bulimia nervosa (BN) suffer a chronification. We evaluated the characteristics of the patients, as well as the treatment outcomes for the people treated in an Endocrinology and Nutrition unit with a diagnosis of SE-ED (which was made based on an evolution greater than 7 years despite conventional treatment). The SE-ED patients in our sample began treatment years after the onset of symptoms, which may have led to their chronification. They presented with a high rate of physical complications and mental comorbidity. In the current sample, it was determined that patients with AN presented with higher rates of osteoporosis (health condition that weakens bones, making them fragile and more likely to break) and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (illness in which testes or ovaries produce little or no sex hormones due to a problem in the pituitary gland) than patients with BN.
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