Fluoxetine has been found to reduce binge eating in individuals with binge eating disorder (BED) 1 4 5 . It has been shown to significantly decrease the
The treatment with fluoxetine was enable to change the binge in rats and only the group that received venlafaxine showed decrease in binge eating induced by
Fluoxetine has been found to reduce binge eating in individuals with binge eating disorder (BED) 1 4 5 . It has been shown to significantly decrease the
by CG Greeno 2024 Cited by ;7-73. KEY. WORDS. Obesity, appetite, fluoxetine, binge eating. INTRODUCTION. Fluoxetine
60 mg per day of. Fluoxetine For Binge Eating Disorder on fluoxetine were significantly less likely to relapse and that
Fluoxetine has been found to reduce binge eating in individuals with binge eating disorder (BED) 1 4 5 . It has been shown to significantly decrease the
Fluoxetine is indicated as a complement of psychotherapy for the reduction of binge-eating and purging activity.
Fluoxetine is indicated as a complement of psychotherapy for the reduction of binge-eating and purging activity.
in fluoxetine versus placebo in outpatients with AN. Sixty- three anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge eating disorder. Eat
Comments
Most people only think of the anorexics you describe as people with eating disorders, but the truth is any person, male or female, young or old, fat or thin can have an eating disorder. It is one disease with many symptoms. Even the psychiatric community breaks them down into different groups based, essentially, on weight. Anorexics are underweight. Bulimics are normal weight. Binge Eaters are overweight.
Personally, I fall into the last category. I first began displaying symptoms when I was seven and I have been trying to recover for more than four years now. I fought the diagnosis because I believed that only skinny people had eating disorders. I was wrong.
People like Dr. Phil and Oprah talk about disordered eating in overweight people, but while there are many undiagnosed Binge Eaters out there, not every fat person has an eating disorder either. There are very specific symptoms, attitudes and beliefs the characterize an eating disorder.
It's not about food and it's not about body image. Those are just symptoms. The body is an easy target to hate when what you really hate is inside of you. Eating disorders are about control and distorted thinking. What you eat or don't eat is something you can control or choose not to control. The behaviours are often about punishing yourself for not being perfect.
When it comes to blame, I blame myself for 99.5% of my eating disorder and I blame my parents for 0.5% because their attitudes certainly contributed to my thought processes. I know that I'm the only one who can help me to recover. Do skinny models and hollywood celebrities make me uncomfortable? Of course they do, but only because I already have those issues. I don't blame them for how I feel.
When I was in a group therapy session with 20 other women, there were 4 anorexics, 5 binge eaters and 11 bulimics. I had common ground with all of them. I am just as likely to binge as I am to starve myself. We were all the same.
The bottom line is this, eating disorders aren't about weight, shape, size or food. We're not psycho crazy and in the end, articles like the one you wrote, don't help anyone.