What many parents and pediatricians consider classic symptoms of
adolescent eating disorders, like calorie restriction and purging,
are actually hallmarks of illness in girls, not boys, Dr. Jason
Nagata of the University of California San Francisco and colleagues
write in a commentary in the Lancet Child & Adolescent Health.
Screening for teen eating disorders for both sexes often focuses
primarily on these symptoms that are more typical among girls, the
authors note.
"Many assessment tools that are currently standard practice to
diagnose eating disorders are geared toward females and are based on
weight loss behaviors with the goal to become thin," Nagata said by
email.
As a result, pediatricians and parents may not notice eating
disorders among teen boys, which are often characterized by eating
too much protein, rigid restriction of carbs and fats, and cycling
between periods of overconsumption and calorie cutting in an effort
to build muscle, the doctors write. Boys with eating disorders may
also use steroids or supplements to bulk up or may compulsively
exercise.
"Exercise is an under-recognized component of eating disorders,"
Nagata said. "Teenagers who excessively exercise can have energy
deficits and become malnourished if they do not increase their food
intake to match their energy needs."
Boys who exercise too much can become malnourished even when they
aren't restricting their calorie intake, the doctors write. But
current treatment guidelines for teen eating disorders don't offer
recommendations on what to do with patients who are exercising
excessively.
Teen boys may also engage in what's known as biohacking, or trying
to optimize physiology for muscle building through practices like
intermittent fasting, elimination diets, supplements, and multiple
cycles of steroid use, the doctors write.
Many supplements that teen boys may use to bulk up are also
unregulated, and can include a variety of ingredients that aren't
clearly labeled or approved for human consumption, the doctors add.
Part of the reason teen boys are so hard to diagnose and treat is
that very little research on eating disorders focuses on boys and
men, said Dr. Trine Tetlie Eik-Nes, a researcher at the Norwegian
University of Science and Technology in Trondheim.
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"We are basically not asking the right questions for boys," Eik-Nes,
who wasn't involved in the commentary, said by email.
"Consequently, boys do not get access to treatment and they do not
themselves see their problems as an eating disorder," Eik-Nes added.
"Moreover, boys may be less familiar with talking about negative
feelings, body image ideals and eating disorders."
Even when teen boys do recognize they have a problem, they may not
speak up because they don't want to identify as having a problem
they think only happens to girls, said Dr. Antonios Dakanalis, a
researcher at the University of Milano-Bicocca in Italy who also
wasn't involved in the commentary.
"Males can face a double stigma - about having a disorder
characterized as feminine or gay, and seeking psychological help,"
Dakanalis said by email.
Even when boys with eating disorders are quite malnourished or ill,
they may not score high enough on scales used to screen for eating
disorders symptoms to suggest that they are truly sick, Dakanalis
said.
"Lower scores on 'gold-standard' measures of eating disorders
contribute to the perception that males do not have eating disorders
or do not become as severely afflicted as females," Dakanalis said.
This makes it especially crucial that parents know what to look for,
Nagata said.
"Disordered eating may develop when a boy becomes preoccupied with
his appearance, body size, weight, food, or exercise in a way that
worsens his quality of life," Nagata advised. "He may withdraw from
his usual activities or friends because of concerns with body size
and appearance."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2HYJf5H The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health,
online May 20, 2019.
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