Cardiac consequences of adolescent anorexia nervosa

被引:0
|
作者
Lupoglazoff, JM
Berkane, N
Denjoy, I
Maillard, G
Leheuzey, MF
Mouren-Simeoni, MC
Casasoprana, A
机构
[1] Hop Robert Debre, Serv Cardiol Pediat, F-75019 Paris, France
[2] Hop Lariboisiere, Serv Cardiol, F-75010 Paris, France
[3] Hop Robert Debre, Serv Pedopsychiat, F-75019 Paris, France
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Cardiac complications are common in adolescent anorexia nervosa and are the cause of a third of deaths. Some workers have reported prolongation of the QT interval and cases of sudden death in these patients. The aim of this study was twofold : to assess the cardiac complications of anorexic adolescents and to determine the outcome after renutrition in the hospital setting. This was a prospective study of 48 consecutive cases (45 girls) with an average age of 14 +/- 2 years, admitted to the paedopsychiatric unit and fulfilling the DSM-IV criteria of anorexia nervosa. The digitised ECC, Holter ECC and echocardiography were recorded before and after renutrition. Anorexia nervosa was severe with a body mass index < 14 in 2/3 of cases. Over 2/3 of patients had bradycardia with a heart rate < 50/min in half the cases but normal chronotropic function on Holter monitoring. Prolongation of the QTc interval was demonstrated (QTc > 440 ms in 11/44 cases). Echocardiographic abnormalities, in particular left ventricular dysfunction (24/46) and pericardial effusion (12/46) were reversible after renutrition. There were no clinical or biological predictive factors for the occurrence of cardiac complications on admission. The authors confirm that cardiac complications of anorexia nervosa are common, usually benign and always reversible after renutrition in hospital. Therefore, most electrical abnormalities normalise with the heart rate and echocardiographic abnormalities with improvement of conditions of load.
引用
收藏
页码:494 / 498
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Attention networks in adolescent anorexia nervosa
    Weinbach, Noam
    Sher, Helene
    Lock, James D.
    Henik, Avishai
    EUROPEAN CHILD & ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2018, 27 (03) : 343 - 351
  • [32] Olanzapine use in adolescent anorexia nervosa
    Dennis K.
    Le Grange D.
    Bremer J.
    Eating and Weight Disorders - Studies on Anorexia, Bulimia and Obesity, 2006, 11 (2) : e53 - e56
  • [33] Cardiac changes in anorexia nervosa
    Spaulding-Barclay, Michael A.
    Stern, Jessica
    Mehler, Philip S.
    CARDIOLOGY IN THE YOUNG, 2016, 26 (04) : 623 - 628
  • [34] Family therapy for adolescent anorexia nervosa
    Blessitt, Esther
    Voulgari, Stamatoula
    Eisler, Ivan
    CURRENT OPINION IN PSYCHIATRY, 2015, 28 (06) : 455 - 460
  • [35] Death and risk in adolescent anorexia nervosa
    Wrate, Robert M.
    PSYCHIATRIC BULLETIN, 2012, 36 (08): : 316 - +
  • [36] Olfaction in child and adolescent anorexia nervosa
    Martin Schecklmann
    Christoph Pfannstiel
    Andreas J. Fallgatter
    Andreas Warnke
    Manfred Gerlach
    Marcel Romanos
    Journal of Neural Transmission, 2012, 119 : 721 - 728
  • [37] Family Interventions in Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa
    le Grange, Daniel
    Eisler, Ivan
    CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRIC CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 2009, 18 (01) : 159 - +
  • [38] Hippocampal subfields in adolescent anorexia nervosa
    Myrvang, Anna D.
    Vangberg, Torgil R.
    Stedal, Kristin
    Ro, Oyvind
    Endestad, Tor
    Rosenvinge, Jan H.
    Aslaksen, Per M.
    PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH-NEUROIMAGING, 2018, 282 : 24 - 30
  • [39] An adolescent with anorexia nervosa presenting with catatonia
    Solanki, Ram Kumar
    Khanna, Shashi Kant
    Solanki, Gunjan
    Yadav, Kuldeep Singh
    Agarwal, Rishika
    Goyal, Manish Kumar
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2021, 63 (01) : 116 - 117
  • [40] Relational attitudes in adolescent girls with and without a diagnosis of anorexia nervosa or atypical anorexia nervosa
    Rachel Bachner-Melman
    Roni Rom
    Lilac Lev-Ari
    Iris Shachar-Lavie
    Orit Krispin
    Rami Tolmacz
    Journal of Eating Disorders, 11 (1)