Identifying common eating disorders, Part Three
eating disorders are common and effect all demographic, ethnic, and both men and women. compulsive overeating is one of the most neglected of these, and as often as with anorexia or bulimia, because many of the triggers and symptoms are very similar confused. This disorder is characterized by an addiction to food and feed use to hide their feelings, to cope with daily stress and fill a gap in itself.
Many other compulsive eaters begin their cycle of poor nutrition in childhood, eating to cope with emotional problems are, and this trend continues into adulthood and adulthood, leading to a disruption of self-esteem and an escalation of both body weight and frequency of episodes of compulsive overeating, or cooked. Unlike bulimia, compulsive eating in is no longer the rule does not clean up after a binge, although they may do from time to time. Usually take the compulsive eater promises never to eat again, and, tragically, to break that promise soon after.
The victims are usually overweight, and be aware that their eating habits are abnormal, but in general feel stigmatized by societal trends of overweight stereotype and prescription plans as a panacea for all symptoms. Compulsive overeaters often suffer from high blood pressure and cholesterol, kidney disease, renal failure, bone loss, arthritis and stroke. Compulsive overeaters often hide behind their appearance, and usually have low self-esteem. The cycle perpetuates the mentality of a binge eater.
It is not uncommon for compulsive overeaters consume as much as 5,000 and up to 60,000 calories a day, well, the similarly high, which is experienced by drug use. Some researchers have even gone so far that suffers from bulimia, binge or abnormality of the metabolic processes of endorphins in the brain accept gone. Other studies have shown that ingestion of food called comfort, usually rich in carbohydrates, triggers the transfer and release of serotonin, a neurotransmitter. These theories can explain the behavior of compulsive eating more.
Recovering compulsive overeating is easy to treat, and a combined Council and the plan of therapy has proven to be most effective. Like all eating disorders, compulsive overeating triggered emotional, and it is necessary that emotional conflicts are resolved, before the healing can begin. If you or someone you know is suffering from over-eating, seek immediate help. Suffer in silence should not be an option.
Eating Disorder Recovery Center