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Bulimia nervosa (medical condition): Eating disorder with binging (overeating) and purging (vomiting).
See also:
Bulimia nervosa:
»Introduction: Bulimia nervosa
»Symptoms of Bulimia nervosa
»Causes of Bulimia nervosa
Bulimia nervosa: a chronic morbid disorder involving repeated and secretive episodic bouts of eating characterized by uncontrolled rapid ingestion of large quantities of food over a short period of time (binge eating), followed by self-induced vomiting, use of laxatives or diuretics, fasting, or vigorous exercise to prevent weight gain; often accompanied by feelings of guilt, depression, or self-disgust. SYN: boulimia, bulimia, hyperorexia.
Source: Stedman's Medical Spellchecker, © 2006 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. All rights reserved.
Bulimia nervosa: eating disorder that involves eating massive quantities of food (binge eating) and then eliminating the food by inappropriate compensatory methods to prevent weight gain, such as self induced vomiting or strong laxatives.
Source: Diseases Database
Bulimia nervosa: eating disorder that involves eating massive quantities of food (binge eating) and then eliminating the food by inappropriate compensatory methods to prevent weight gain, such as self induced vomiting or strong laxatives.
Source: CRISP
Bulimia nervosa: An eating disorder that is characterized by a cycle of binge eating (BULIMIA or bingeing) followed by inappropriate acts (purging) to avert weight gain. Purging methods often include self-induced VOMITING, use of LAXATIVES or DIURETICS, excessive exercise, and FASTING.
Source: MeSH 2007
These medical condition or symptom topics may be relevant to medical information for Bulimia nervosa:
Bulimia nervosa (medical condition): See Bulimia nervosa (disease information).
»Introduction: Bulimia nervosa
»Symptoms of Bulimia nervosa
»Causes of Bulimia nervosa
Bulimia nervosa: Bulimia nervosa is listed as a type of (or associated with) the following medical conditions in our database:
Bulimia nervosa, often simply called bulimia, is an eating disorder. People with bulimia consume large amounts of food and then rid their bodies of the excess calories by purging (self-induce vomiting, misuse of laxatives or diuretics) or by non-purging (excessive exercise, fasting) behaviors. Some bulimics use a combination of purging and non-purging behaviors. The cycle of overeating and purging can quickly become an addictive behavior. Often, the individual will feel a loss of control during over eating and the purging/nonpurging behavior becomes a way of regaining control. (Source: excerpt from Bulimia Nervosa: NWHIC)
Bulimia nervosa, often simply called bulimia, is an eating disorder. People with bulimia consume large amounts of food and then rid their bodies of the excess calories by purging (self-induce vomiting, misuse of laxatives or diuretics) or by non-purging (excessive exercise, fasting) behaviors. Some bulimics use a combination of purging and non-purging behaviors. The cycle of overeating and purging can quickly become an addictive behavior. Often, the individual will feel a loss of control during over eating and the purging/nonpurging behavior becomes a way of regaining control. (Source: excerpt from Bulimia Nervosa: NWHIC)
Individuals suffering from Bulimia Nervosa follow a routine of secretive, uncontrolled or binge eating (ingesting an abnormally large amount of food within a set period of time) followed by behaviors to rid the body of food consumed. This includes self - induced vomiting and/or the misuse of laxatives, diet pills, diuretics (water pills), excessive exercise or fasting. Bulimia afflicts approximately 1% - 3% of adolescents in the US with the illness usually beginning in late adolescence or early adult life (Source: excerpt from Fact Sheet Eating Disorders: NWHIC)
Bulimia nervosa (symptom): Bulimia nervosa, often simply called bulimia, is an eating disorder. People with bulimia consume large amounts of food and then rid their bodies of the excess calories by purging (self-induce vomiting, misuse of laxatives or diuretics) or by non-purging (excessive exercise, fasting) behaviors. Some bulimics use a combination of purging and non-purging behaviors. The cycle of overeating and purging can quickly become an addictive behavior. Often, the individual will feel a loss of control during over eating and the purging/nonpurging behavior becomes a way of regaining control. (Source: excerpt from Bulimia Nervosa: NWHIC)
Bulimia nervosa (symptom): See Bulimia nervosa (symptom information).
These medical disease topics may be related to Bulimia nervosa:
Source - MeSH 2007
Source - MeSH 2007
Source - MeSH 2007
Source - CRISP
The following list attempts to classify Bulimia nervosa into categories where each line is subset of the next.
Source: Diseases Database
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