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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the Departments of Psychiatry (LM, BTW, EK, and DG), Molecular Genetics (RLL), and Obstetrics and Gynecology (MPW), College of Physicians and Surgeons, the Department of Biostatistics, Mailman School of Public Health (MKP), the New York State Psychiatric Institute (LM, BTW, EK, and DG), Columbia University, New York, NY, and the Body Composition Unit, New York Obesity Research Center, St Luke'sRoosevelt Hospital Center, New York, NY (RNP, SBH, DG, and JW)
Background: Body image distortions are a core feature of anorexia nervosa (AN). Increasing evidence suggests that the fat distribution immediately after weight restoration in patients with AN differs from the distribution typical of healthy adult women.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to assess body fat distribution before and shortly after normalization of weight in women with AN.
Design: Body composition and fat distribution were assessed by anthropometry, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, and whole-body magnetic resonance imaging in 29 women with AN before and after weight normalization and at a single time point in 15 female control subjects. Hormone concentrations were also evaluated in patients and control subjects.
Results: During
10.1 ± 2.9 wk (range: 417.3 wk) of treatment, patients with AN gained 12.2 ± 3.6 kg, and refed weight (54.1 ± 4.2 kg) did not differ significantly from that of control subjects (54.7 ± 4.4 kg). Waist-to-hip circumference ratio (P < 0.006), total trunk fat (P < 0.003), visceral adipose tissue (P < 0.006), and intramuscular adipose tissue (P < 0.003) were significantly greater in the weight-recovered patients than in the control subjects. In contrast, after refeeding, total subcutaneous adipose tissue and skeletal muscle mass did not differ significantly between the patients and control subjects. In patients with AN, serum cortisol decreased and serum estradiol increased significantly with refeeding but not to control concentrations.
Conclusions: In women with AN, normalization of weight in the short term is associated with an abnormal distribution of body fat. The implications of these findings for the long-term psychological and physical health of women with AN are unknown.
Key Words: Body fat distribution anorexia nervosa visceral adipose tissue whole-body MRI
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