Bulimia nervosa involves recurrent episodes of binge eating followed by compensatory behaviors (purging, laxative use, excessive exercise). Dental erosion, electrolyte abnormalities, and esophageal damage are common complications; CBT is first-line treatment.
Psychiatric conditions generate complications through neurobiological disease progression, the adverse consequences of psychotropic medications, behavioural and lifestyle consequences of mental illness, and the bidirectional relationship with physical health. Depression increases all-cause mortality by 50–100%; schizophrenia reduces life expectancy by 15–20 years. Complications are not limited to mental health crises — metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular disease, and substance use disorders represent major sources of morbidity. Social and occupational disability amplify the complication burden.
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Treatment & Management
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Prognosis & Outlook
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Differential Diagnosis
Conditions that mimic Bulimia Nervosa — distinguishing features & tests
Bulimia Nervosa Overview
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