BODY DYSMORPHIC DISORDER: CLINICAL ASPECTS, NOSOLOGICAL DIMENSIONS AND CONTROVERSIES WITH ANOREXIA NERVOSA
Trastorno dismórfico corporal: aspectos clínicos, dimensiones nosológicas y controversias con la anorexia nerviosa
Author
Behar, Rosa; Universidad de Valparaíso
Arancibia, Marcelo; Universidad de Valparaíso
Heitzer, Cristóbal; Universidad de Valparaíso
Meza, Nicolás; Universidad de Valparaíso
Abstract
There is strong evidence about the coexistence of body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) and eating disorders (ED), particularly with anorexia nervosa (AN). An exhaustive review of the specialised literature regarding these disorders was carried out. The results show that their co-occurrence implies a more complex diagnosis and treatment, a more severe clinical symptomatology and a worse prognosis and outcome. Both disorders display common similarities, differences and comorbidities, which allow authors to classify them in different nosological spectra (somatomorphic, anxious, obsessive-compulsive, affective and psychotic). Their crossover involves higher levels of body dissatisfaction and body image distortion, depression, suicidal tendency, personality disorders, substance use/abuse, obsessive-compulsive disorder, social phobia, alexithymia and childhood abuse or neglect background. Treatment including cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy and selective reuptake serotonin inhibitors are effective for both, BDD and ED; nevertheless, plastic surgery could exacerbate BDD. Clinical traits of BDD must be systematically detected in patients suffering from ED and vice versa. There is strong evidence about the coexistence of body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) and eating disorders (ED), particularly with anorexia nervosa (AN). An exhaustive review of the specialised literature regarding these disorders was carried out. The results show that their co-occurrence implies a more complex diagnosis and treatment, a more severe clinical symptomatology and a worse prognosis and outcome. Both disorders display common similarities, differences and comorbidities, which allow authors to classify them in different nosological spectra (somatomorphic, anxious, obsessive-compulsive, affective and psychotic). Their crossover involves higher levels of body dissatisfaction and body image distortion, depression, suicidal tendency, personality disorders, substance use/abuse, obsessive-compulsive disorder, social phobia, alexithymia and childhood abuse or neglect background. Treatment including cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy and selective reuptake serotonin inhibitors are effective for both, BDD and ED; nevertheless, plastic surgery could exacerbate BDD. Clinical traits of BDD must be systematically detected in patients suffering from ED and vice versa.
Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
DSM-5. ¿La incorporación definitiva de la psiquiatría en la medicina?
Figueroa, Gustavo; Universidad de Valparaíso. Revista Médica de Chile; Vol. 147, núm. 4 (2019): ABRIL 2019 -
Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID): What the pediatrician should know
De Toro, Valeria; Aedo, Karina; Urrejola, Pascuala. Revista Chilena de Pediatría; Vol. 92, Núm. 2 (2021): Marzo - Abril; 298-307 -
Manía en niños y adolescentes
Zúñiga,Mario; Farías,Ximena. Revista chilena de neuro-psiquiatría v.40 n.1 2002