Eating Disorder Evaluation
Eating Disorder Evaluation
Eating Disorder Management
Eating Disorder Management
Abnormal Uterine Bleeding Evaluation & Management
100

What might you ask on H&P to help with evaluation of an eating disorder?

Obtain history with and without family present

When did problematic eating behaviors begin?

  • What is a recent minimum weight?
  • What is a recent maximum weight?

Perception

  • Do you perceive you are too big, too small, or just right?
  • Do you have a goal weight?
  • Do you fear gaining weight?

Diet:

  • 24 hour diet recall
  • Do they have any dietary avoidances?
  • Caffeine intake?
  • How much fluids and type of fluids/day?

Other Behaviors

  • Exercise patterns
  • Bingeing
  • Purging
  • Abuse of laxatives, diuretics, diet pills

SSHADESS Exam

  • Strengths:
  • School:
  • Home:
  • Activity: Social media influence
  • Drugs:
  • Eating (as above)
  • Suicidality/Sadness: PHQ-9, GAD-7
  • Safety: Physical/sexual/emotional abuse
100

What labs might you get in evaluating someone with an eating disorder?

  • CBC: Anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia
  • CMP: K+, AST, ALT
  • Laxative Abuse: Hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, hyperuricemia, hypocalcemia, elevated LFTs
  • Magnesium
  • Phosphorus
  • TSH
  • Consider checking Vitamin A, Vitamin D, Zinc
  • Urinalysis: starvation ketosis, low specific gravity – suggestive of water loading
  • Urine pregnancy test
  • Amenorrheic --> Prolactin, LH, FSH, estradiol
100
What supplement do you give to prevent Wernicke's encephalopathy? 

Thiamine 

100

Name at least 2 teams to consult for a patient with an eating disorder. 

1. Nutritionist
2. Psychology/Therapy
3. Adolescent Medicine (if primary team not comfortable managing)

100

What are signs of heavy menstrual bleeding?

- changing pad/tampon every 1-2 hours
- “Flooding” or “accidents”
- 8 days or longer
- Symptoms: hemodynamic instability, lethargy, fatigue, lightheadedness, syncope, cold intolerance; PICA, CP, SOB
- Hb <7 or <10 with active heavy bleeding

200

What is the difference between Atypical Anorexia Nervosa and Anorexia Nervosa? Which one is more common?

Atypical Anorexia Nervosa: Meets criteria for Anorexia Nervosa without the low body weight

Atypical AN is much more common! It has same issues with cognitive dysfunction, loss of menses, BMD. 

200

If someone has callus over their knuckles or parotitis, what disordered eating behavior do you think of?

Purging

200

List some examples (at least 1) of good practices to measure weight in a patient with an eating disorder. 

- Blind (patients turn around, number is not revealed to them, whited out, not discussed)
- Post-Void in AM (lightest weight)
- In a gown (to not hide weights)

We ask families to throw away scales

200

For a patient with an eating disorder, if you had to choose one therapy with the most evidence behind it, which one is best to start - SSRI, Antipsychotic, or Psychotherapy? 

Therapy

(Eating Disorder specific Family Based Therapy is gold standard)

200

What are some DDX for Heavy Menstrual Bleeding? (list 2 for points)

- HPO axis immaturity
- Hypo or hyperthyroidism
- Testosterone disorder - like congenital adrenal hyperplasia, testosterone secreting tumor
- Prolactinoma: galactorrhea, headache, visual field defects
- Bleeding disorder (like VWD): HX excessive bleeding with surgical or dental procedures, easy bruising, frequent nose bleeds
- Acquired: Gonorrhea/chlamydia, pregnancy

300

What is the difference between Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa? 

Essentially, which behavior is more prevalent restricting (even if has binge-eating/purging) vs binge-eating (even if it has compensatory restricting)

300

Common organ dysfunction in a patient with an eating disorder 

- Gastroparesis, GERD, constipation
- Orthostatic hypotension, POTS, cool extremities
- Menses irregularity/amenorrhea 

300

What labs do you order to monitor for refeeding syndrome?

Phos, Mag, K

(LFTs can also be elevated)

300

List 1 common medicine given to help with emotional distress related to eating. 

Olanzapine or Fluoxetine (SSRI) 

300

Most common cause of abnormal uterine bleeding in adolescents (particularly in the first 1-2 years of menstruation).

Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Ovarian (HPO) axis immaturity

400
What is ARFID? How can it present itself? 

Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder

An eating or feeding disturbance, usually presents as

  • Apparent lack of interest in eating or food OR
  • Avoidance based on sensory characteristics of food OR
  • Concern about aversive consequences of eating

As manifested by persistent failure to meet appropriate nutritional and/or energy needs with one (or more) of the following

  • Significant weight loss or failure to achieve expected weight gain or faltering growth in children
  • Significant nutritional deficiency
  • Dependence on enteral feeding or oral nutritional supplements
  • Marked interference with psychosocial functioning

Not attributable to a concurrent medical condition, mental disorder, lack of available food, culturally sanctioned practice

400

List some criteria for inpatient hospitalization:

- <75% median BMI
- Dehydration
- Electrolyte disturbances
- EKG abnormalities (prolonged QTc, severe bradycardia)
- Vital sign instability (HR <50 daytime, <45 nighttime; hypotension <90/45, temp <96, orthostatic +)
- Arrested growth
- Failure of outpatient treatment, acute food refusal, uncontrollable bingeing/purging
- Syncope, seizures, cardiac failure, pancreatitis...
- Comorbid psychiatric or medical condition limits outpatient treatment (severe depression, SI, T1DM)

400
Other than electrolyte abnormalities, what are other signs of refeeding syndrome? (2)

Cardiovascular Compromise: Tachycardia, Heart Failure, Hypotension, Hypertension
Respiratory Failure:
Neurological: Tremors, paresthesias, delirium, seizures
Muscular: Impaired contractility, weakness, myalgia, and tetany
Elevated LFTs

400

How much weight gain would you like your patient with an eating disorder to gain?

100-200g/day (1-2 lbs/week)

400

First line treatment for Abnormal Uterine Bleeding if there are no contraindications. 

Estrogen (IV conjugated estrogen or combined estrogen-progesterone pill up to q6h until bleeding stops)

500

A patient with an eating disorder has early satiety, epigastric abdominal pain soon after starting a meal, nausea, vomiting. What might you consider as part of the DDX. 

SMA Syndrome:  The superior mesenteric artery is normally covered with fatty tissue; weight loss reduces the fat pad and narrows the angle between the two vessels (SMA + aorta), entrapping the duodenum and causing a small bowel obstruction

Imaging (CTA)

- Duodenal obstruction with an abrupt cutoff in the third portion and active peristalsis.
- An aortomesenteric artery angle of ≤25° is the most sensitive measure of diagnosis, particularly if the aortomesenteric distance is ≤8 mm.
- High fixation of the duodenum by the ligament of Treitz, abnormally low origin of the superior mesenteric artery, or anomalies of the superior mesenteric artery.

Weight gain in as little as 5-10 lbs can improve symptoms

500

If someone has not had a period in 6 months or more, what might you get to evaluate this person's health?

DEXA scan
500

How do you treat refeeding syndrome?

ABCs + Aggressively replace electrolytes +
DO NOT ADVANCE DIET (may even decrease calorie to previously tolerated calorie)

500

A patient needs eating-disorder specific therapy. What level of care would the patient get the most therapy?

Residential

Other options:
- Partial hospitalization: Daily, 4-8 hours/day
- Intensive outpatient: 2-3 days a week
- Outpatient: Weekly to monthly

500

List some contraindications to estrogen usage (list at least 2)

- History of VTE, vascular disease, ischemic heart disease
- Migraine with aura
- Breast cancer
- Decompensated cirrhosis, liver cancer
- Lupus; FHX of autoimmune diseases

M
e
n
u