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1.
Rev Med Interne ; 37(2): 84-90, 2016 Feb.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26302696

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The diagnostic value of selective anorexia is debated. Some authors have suggested an association between meat aversion and cancer, but most do not use it as a diagnostic tool. We aimed to characterize anorexia of different diseases to search for an association between selective aversions and diagnostic groups. METHODS: All the patients admitted to three departments of a teaching hospital were included consecutively for 22months if they had more than 10 % weight loss in less than one year. Patients were excluded if history taking was not reliable, or if they suffered from anorexia nervosa. We compiled diagnoses at discharge and validated them six months later. We used logistic regression to identify independent factors associated with selective anorexia. RESULTS: Inclusion criteria were met in 106patients (female 44 %, median age 65years). Most frequent diagnoses were: cancer (36 %), infection (35 %), digestive diseases (19 %), non organic diseases (21 %). Recent selective anorexia was found in 46 % of the cases. It was significantly associated with female gender (P=0.002), marginally with young age (P=0.069) and long duration of weight loss (P=0.079). Opioid use at admission was negatively associated with selective anorexia (P=0.001). No specific diagnostic category was found to be associated. CONCLUSION: Selective anorexia does not appear to be a useful symptom to investigate pathological weight loss. It behaves more like a non-specific reactivation by current disease of earlier latent personal food aversions.


Subject(s)
Anorexia/etiology , Symptom Assessment , Taste , Weight Loss , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Anorexia/classification , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Surveys and Questionnaires
2.
Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care ; 15(3): 220-5, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22466925

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This article reviews the current status of the definition of cancer cachexia, and comments on future initiatives to refine it and to use it as a foundation for a cancer cachexia classification system. RECENT FINDINGS: There has been a plethora of work by expert panels defining cachexia. Stemming from this work, an expert panel has published a definition of cancer cachexia and a three level staging system: precachexia, cachexia, and refractory cachexia. Colleagues in the cancer pain field have put forward a sophisticated pain classification system. Work to develop a similar classification system for cachexia is now commencing. Aside from improved communication, these efforts may also enable the oncology community to better appreciate the importance of cancer cachexia and to participate in interdisciplinary treatment programmes to combat cachexia. SUMMARY: The quest to determine the pathophysiology of cancer cachexia and to use this knowledge to identify patient subsets will further research. Equally important, the fruits of this endeavour will lead to a higher priority for addressing cachexia with consequent development of a multimodal approach to management.


Subject(s)
Cachexia/classification , Cachexia/therapy , Neoplasms/classification , Neoplasms/therapy , Anorexia/classification , Anorexia/etiology , Anorexia/physiopathology , Anorexia/therapy , Cachexia/etiology , Cachexia/physiopathology , Combined Modality Therapy/methods , Energy Intake , Exercise , Humans , Neoplasms/complications , Neoplasms/physiopathology , Pain/diet therapy , Pain/drug therapy , Pain/etiology , Pain/physiopathology , Palliative Care/methods , Quality of Life
3.
Physiol Behav ; 100(5): 472-7, 2010 Jul 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20399797

ABSTRACT

The anorexia that accompanies the drinking of hypertonic saline (DE-anorexia) is a critical adaptive behavioral mechanism that helps protect the integrity of fluid compartments during extended periods of cellular dehydration. Feeding is rapidly reinstated once drinking water is made available again. The relative simplicity and reproducibility of these behaviors makes DE-anorexia a very useful model for investigating how the various neural networks that control ingestive behaviors first suppress and then reinstate feeding. We show that DE-anorexia develops primarily because the mechanisms that terminate ongoing meals are upregulated in such a way as to significantly reduce meal size. At the same time however, signals generated by the ensuing negative energy balance appropriately activate neural mechanisms that can increase food intake. But as the output from these two competing processes is integrated, the net result is an increasing reduction of nocturnal food intake, despite the fact that spontaneous meals are initiated with the same frequency as in control animals. Furthermore, hypothalamic NPY injections also stimulate feeding in DE-anorexic animals with the same latency as controls, but again meals are prematurely terminated. Comparing Fos expression patterns across the brain following 2-deoxyglucose administration to control and DE-anorexic animals implicates neurons in the descending part of the parvicellular paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus and the lateral hypothalamic areas as key components of the networks that control DE-anorexia. Finally, DE-anorexia generates multiple inhibitory processes to suppress feeding. These are differentially disengaged once drinking water is reinstated. The paper represents an invited review by a symposium, award winner or keynote speaker at the Society for the Study of Ingestive Behavior [SSIB] Annual Meeting in Portland, July 2009.


Subject(s)
Anorexia/complications , Dehydration/complications , Drinking Behavior/physiology , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Animals , Anorexia/classification , Anorexia/pathology , Dehydration/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Drinking Behavior/drug effects , Feeding Behavior/drug effects , Humans , Models, Neurological , Nerve Net/pathology , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Neural Pathways/pathology , Neural Pathways/physiopathology , Saline Solution, Hypertonic/administration & dosage
4.
Psychol Med ; 40(10): 1735-44, 2010 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20047706

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Anorexia nervosa (AN) and bulimia nervosa (BN) are marked by longitudinal symptom fluctuations. DSM-IV-TR does not address how to classify eating disorder (ED) presentations in individuals who no longer meet full criteria for these disorders. To consider this issue, we examined subthreshold presentations in women with initial diagnoses of AN and BN. METHOD: A total of 246 women with AN or BN were followed for a median of 9 years; weekly symptom data were collected at frequent intervals using the Longitudinal Interval Follow-up Evaluation of Eating Disorders (LIFE-EAT-II). Outcomes were ED presentations that were subthreshold for 3 months, including those narrowly missing full criteria for AN or BN, along with binge eating disorder (BED) and purging disorder. RESULTS: During follow-up, most women (77.6%) experienced a subthreshold presentation. Subthreshold presentation was related to intake diagnosis (Wald chi2=8.065, df=2, p=0.018). Individuals with AN most often developed subthreshold presentations resembling AN; those with BN were more likely to develop subthreshold BN. Purging disorder was experienced by half of those with BN and one-quarter of those with AN binge/purge type (ANBP); BED occurred in 20% with BN. Transition from AN or BN to most subthreshold types was associated with improved psychosocial functioning (p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Subthreshold presentations in women with lifetime AN and BN were common, resembled the initial diagnosis, and were associated with modest improvements in psychosocial functioning. For most with lifetime AN and BN, subthreshold presentations seem to represent part of the course of illness and to fit within the original AN or BN diagnosis.


Subject(s)
Anorexia/classification , Bulimia Nervosa/classification , Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , Feeding and Eating Disorders/classification , Anorexia/diagnosis , Anorexia/psychology , Bulimia Nervosa/diagnosis , Bulimia Nervosa/psychology , Chi-Square Distribution , Feeding and Eating Disorders/diagnosis , Feeding and Eating Disorders/psychology , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Linear Models , Longitudinal Studies , Markov Chains , Psychology , Social Adjustment , Young Adult
8.
Arch Pediatr ; 13(5): 464-72, 2006 May.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16563709

ABSTRACT

Young child's anorexia (0-4 years) may have organic or psychological origin, when parents-child relationships are concerned. The most complex and earliest forms often have unspecified aetiology. Psychopathological classifications, which emphasize the mother-child relationships, are essential reference marks. But there is now a consensus in the definitions: the diagnosis of infantile anorexia requires criteria of acute or chronic malnutrition. We mainly distinguish anorexia by early disorder of homeostasis, anorexia resulting from serious disorder of attachment, anorexia by disorder of mother-child interactions, and finally early and complex anorexia, mixing an organic vulnerability and a bonding trouble, which can be secondary. Treatments differ according to the selected aetiology. Even if the origin is not mainly the fact of a relational mother-child dysfunction, parents-child's relations require a support to avoid aggravation by interactive vicious circles (force feeding). More than other diseases of early childhood, feeding disorders require a good knowledge of the working hypotheses both in the field of the paediatrics and the child psychiatry.


Subject(s)
Anorexia , Anorexia/classification , Anorexia/etiology , Anorexia/psychology , Anorexia/therapy , Child, Preschool , Feeding Behavior , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn
9.
J Palliat Med ; 4(2): 157-65, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11441624

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To define symptoms and therapeutic requirements for patients with metastatic or locally recurrent lung cancer. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Data were collected from 69 consecutive patients with locally advanced lung cancer seen in consultation at a radiation oncology facility serving a community hospital in Virginia. The Lung Cancer Symptom Scale, a validated quality of life instrument, measured the incidence of symptoms in this group. RESULTS: Average survival for the entire group was 7 months. Fifty-seven patients received 81 courses of radiation therapy, 33 directed at thoracic disease and 48 delivered to sites of metastasis. Thirty-three percent of those who received radiation therapy required treatment to more than one anatomic site. Every patient was symptomatic at the time of consultation, with the number (p = 0.001) and severity (p = 0.001) of symptoms they suffered worse in the patient group seen 0 to 3 months prior to death rather than 4 to 6 months prior to death. With the exception of cough, symptoms were marked in their severity. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with advanced lung cancer suffer frequent and severe symptoms that worsen in the final months of life. The appropriate timing and combination of radiotherapy and chemotherapy are yet to be resolved. Future studies will require use of validated quality of life instruments to better catalogue palliation and treatment toxicity.


Subject(s)
Anorexia/classification , Anorexia/etiology , Bone Neoplasms/complications , Bone Neoplasms/secondary , Brain Neoplasms/complications , Brain Neoplasms/secondary , Chest Pain/classification , Chest Pain/etiology , Cough/classification , Cough/etiology , Dyspnea/classification , Dyspnea/etiology , Fatigue/classification , Fatigue/etiology , Hemoptysis/classification , Hemoptysis/etiology , Lung Neoplasms/pathology , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/complications , Quality of Life , Severity of Illness Index , Aged , Anorexia/psychology , Bone Neoplasms/mortality , Bone Neoplasms/therapy , Brain Neoplasms/mortality , Brain Neoplasms/therapy , Chest Pain/psychology , Combined Modality Therapy , Cough/psychology , Cross-Sectional Studies , Dyspnea/psychology , Fatigue/psychology , Female , Hemoptysis/psychology , Hospitals, Community , Humans , Incidence , Male , Palliative Care/methods , Prospective Studies , Survival Analysis , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome , Virginia/epidemiology
11.
Pediatr Med Chir ; 10(1): 63-72, 1988.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3163800

ABSTRACT

The anorexia is a frequent cause for paediatric consultation, especially during the first year of life, during which often it is not due to illness or to some organic cause. Particularly interesting from the etiopathogenetic and most of all from the curative point of view are the protracted anorexias in which the relationships mother-child-surroundings appear disturbed. Generally, the loss or the simple reduction of the appetite could heal, all the same and also in a short while if the mother would accept willingly the new situation, trusting in a spontaneous resolution. On the contrary she usually forces the infant to take the meal even if incompletely, meeting at each new attempt, the infant's resistance initially passive and then more and more active and efficacious. Thus an "anorexia for opposition" is established by the conflict between mother and child that the mother stirfs up to then end looser if not even victim. An exemplar in this connection is given by the anorexias of the 16 personal cases extracted from a larger casuistry: infant of age between 40 days and 12 months in the most part of which the anorexia was arisen from different causes (illness from slight infections, the replacement of the human milk with the adapted milk, the weaning, copious rations); in some infants the loss of appetite was without an apparent cause. The anorexia became worse after the mother's reiterated attempts to force the infant to have a meal. During the hospitalization the mother was detained with the son; the giving of the meals was in a first time done by the paramedical personnel with the mother present an then by the mother only. In 14 infants the cyproheptadine was given. Only in a few cases the mothers were treated with anxiolytic. All the cases have been resolve positively.


Subject(s)
Anorexia , Feeding and Eating Disorders , Anorexia/classification , Anorexia/complications , Anorexia/drug therapy , Anorexia/etiology , Anorexia/physiopathology , Appetite/physiology , Feeding and Eating Disorders/classification , Feeding and Eating Disorders/complications , Feeding and Eating Disorders/drug therapy , Feeding and Eating Disorders/etiology , Feeding and Eating Disorders/physiopathology , Female , Humans , Hunger/physiology , Infant , Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Male , Maternal Behavior , Mother-Child Relations
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