Anorexia Nervosa (AN)
Detailed Diagnostic Criteria
Detailed diagnostic criteria are taken from the Diagnostic Statistical Manual, 5th edition (DSM-V).
- Restriction of energy intake relative to requirements, leading to a significant low body weight in the context of age, sex, developmental trajectory, and physical health (less than minimally normal/expected).
- Intense fear of gaining weight or becoming fat or persistent behavior that interferes with weight gain.
- Disturbance in the way in which one's body weight, size, or shape is experienced (i.e. body image disturbance); denial of the seriousness of the current low body weight.
- Subtypes:
- Restricting Type: During the last 3 months, the person has not regularly engaged in binge-eating or purging behavior (i.e., self-induced vomiting or the misuse of laxatives, diuretics, or enemas)
- Binge-Eating/Purging Type: During the last 3 months, the person has regularly engaged in binge-eating or purging behavior (i.e., self-induced vomiting or the misuse of laxatives, diuretics, or enemas).
Prevalence of Anorexia
According to Keel (2005) and Wilson, Grilo & Vitousek (2007), the prevalence of eating disorders is as follows:
- The female-to-male ratio is 10:1
- The percentage of women who have had anorexia at some point in their lifetime (lifetime prevalence) is 0.5%
Typical Course of Anorexia Nervosa
Keel (2005), Steinhausen (2002) and Wilson, Grilo & Vitousek (2007) describe the typical onset and course of eating disorders; Leigh (2019) provides recovery statistics:
- Onset: usually early to late adolescence
- Approximately 21% make a full recovery (an absence of all clinical symptoms).
- 75 % improve but remain symptomatic
- 20% the illness becomes chronic and remitting
- 5% of those diagnosed eventually die – this is the highest mortality of any psychiatric disorder.
- The leading cause of death is medical complications.
- The second most common cause is suicide.
- 51% of patients hospitalized eventually require a second hospitalization
- 10-50% of individuals with anorexia cross over to bulimia
Last updated: 18 March 2021