Pregnancy may open a window of vulnerability for
developing binge eating disorder, especially for women from lower socio
economic situations, according to a study from the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill researchers and colleagues in Norway.
In a long-term study of 100,000 pregnant Norwegian women, the researchers
saw an unexpected increase in new incidences of binge eating disorder that
began during pregnancy. The research is the largest population-based study
of eating disorders during pregnancy.
Previously, small clinical studies had suggested that often eating disorders
go into remission during pregnancy, just as some pregnant women
spontaneously quit smoking cigarettes.
"We need to be very vigilant across the socioeconomic spectrum to screen for
the development of disordered eating during pregnancy. It's very important
that all women receive adequate prenatal care that includes nutritional
support," said Dr. Cynthia M. Bulik, lead study author and William R. and
Jeanne H. Jordan Distinguished Professor of eating disorders in the
department of psychiatry at the UNC School of Medicine and the department of
nutrition in the UNC School of Public Health.
The findings were published in the August 2007 issue of Psychological
Medicine. The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes
of Health.
Binge eating differs from the normal cravings that pregnant women often
report, Bulik explained. People with binge eating disorder regularly consume
large amounts of food in a set period of time and report feeling
out-of-control during the episode.
The disorder differs from bulimia nervosa in that sufferers don't engage in
purging, such as using vomiting or laxatives.
In addition to contributing to weight gain and obesity, binge eating
disorder is also associated with health problems such as anxiety and
depression, insomnia, and chronic pain.
In the study, for women who already had the disorder, continuation of
symptoms during pregnancy was more common than remission, the researchers
found. New cases were more likely than other eating disorders to develop
during pregnancy. Lower education and lower minimum combined income was
associated with new onset cases of binge eating disorders.
The researchers will follow the impact of eating disorders, especially binge
eating, on the women and their children over time. They want to find out,
for instance, if fluctuating nutrients during gestation have impact on
children's birth weight, development and childhood and adolescent eating and
weight patterns.
"We have this group of women that we need to study intensively to find out
the impact of binge eating on offspring. We didn't know these women existed
before," Bulik said.
Other UNC-Chapel Hill authors include biostatistician Ann Von Holle; Dr.
Robert Hamer, a professor in the department of psychiatry; Dr. Anna Maria
Siega-Riz, associate professor in the departments of nutrition and
epidemiology; and Dr. Patrick F. Sullivan, professor in the departments of
psychiatry and genetics.
Co-authors at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health in Norway are Drs.
Cecilie Knoph Berg, Leila Torgersen, Per Magnus, Camilla Stoltenberg and Ted
Reichborn-Kjennerud, who is also affiliated with the University of Oslo,
Norway.