Anorexia may be caused by bacterial infection, BPS model questioned

whodathunkit

Senior Member
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Might have been body dysmorphia.
Yep, that sounds exactly what @rosie26 described. I have mild dysmorphia. It's become plain to me over the years that what I see is not what others see, that's for sure. This was me

never satisfied with how she looks, and is always criticizing her features instead of blaming the dress for a perceived negative effect.
Although I usually kept all the criticism in my head because of the reaction I would get from others when I voiced it.

Mom's got it mildly, too, she was a real fat phobe for a while, so it's probably hereditary to some extent, maybe due to some snps. ;) It never drove me to anorexia (I have the opposite problem, in fact), but when I was thin I was never thin enough. I thought I was a cow. I look at old pictures now and think "Holy crap, I totally *wasted* that!" but c'est la vie, I guess.
 

rosie26

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NZ
Might have been body dysmorphia.
Perhaps that was what it was. I think the problem was that I hadn't set a weight to stop dieting and should have.

I think this must happen to some anorexic's, they lose the weight and then don't know when to stop.
 
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rosie26

Senior Member
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NZ
Yep, that sounds exactly what @rosie26 described. I have mild dysmorphia. It's become plain to me over the years that what I see is not what others see, that's for sure. This was me
It took me a few years to slowly pick up weight again. I enjoy food, so a couple of years after I had lost weight I got a job at a place where they served a lovely meal with a pudding at lunchtime and after a year of tucking into the lunch dinners at work and then having another dinner when I got home. I was roly-poly again for awhile.:lol: I managed to shed it again but I found a good weight that was not to thin or fat and I ate with out dieting, I just kept active.
 

Richard7

Senior Member
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Australia
an article on this paper and a genetic study underway in the SMH
http://www.smh.com.au/national/health/its-insane-but-it-just-might-work-20160428-gogy2g.html

"Only 32 per cent of over 2400 Australian study participants to date said they were being monitored by a medical professional, according to the lead Australian ANGI study investigator Professor Nicholas Martin."

Strange, I think this sounds appalling even though I expect that the percentage of people with ME/CFS being monitored by a doctor would be lower, and acknowledge in ME/CFS (and perhaps anorexia nervosa) that that is because the doctors have so little to offer.
 
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