Blinder Barton J, Cumella Edward J, Sanathara Visant A
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, University of California, Irvine, 400 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, California 92660, USA.
Psychosom Med. 2006 May-Jun;68(3):454-62. doi: 10.1097/01.psy.0000221254.77675.f5.
We analyze 27 point-prevalent DSM-IV Axis I comorbidities for eating disorder inpatients.
The sample included 2436 female inpatients treated between January 1, 1995, and December 31, 2000, for primary DSM-IV diagnoses of anorexia, bulimia, and eating disorder not otherwise specified. Analyses were multivariate analysis of variance and multinomial logistic regression; sociodemographics and severity-of-illness measures were controlled.
Ninety-seven percent of patients evidenced > or = 1 comorbid diagnoses; 94% evidenced comorbid mood disorders, largely unipolar depression, with no differences across eating disorders; 56% evidenced anxiety disorders, with no differences across eating disorders; and 22% evidenced substance use disorders, with significant differences across eating disorders (p < .0001). Five specific diagnoses differed across eating disorders. Alcohol abuse/dependence was twice as likely with bulimia (p < .0001); polysubstance abuse/dependence three times as likely with bulimia (p < .0001); obsessive-compulsive disorder twice as likely with restricting and binge/purge anorexia (p < .01); posttraumatic stress disorder twice as likely with binge-purge anorexia (p < .05); schizophrenia/other psychoses three times more likely with restricting anorexia (p < .05) and two times with binge-purge anorexia (p < .05).
New findings emerged: extremely high comorbidity regardless of eating disorder, ubiquitous depression across all eating disorders, no difference in overall rate of anxiety disorders across eating disorders, greater posttraumatic stress disorder in binge-purge anorexia, more psychotic diagnoses in anorexia. Certain previous findings were confirmed: more obsessive-compulsive disorder in anorexia; more substance use in bulimia; and a replicated comorbidity rank-ordering for eating disorder patients: mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders, respectively.
我们分析了27种进食障碍住院患者中普遍存在的DSM-IV轴I共病情况。
样本包括1995年1月1日至2000年12月31日期间接受治疗的2436名女性住院患者,她们的主要DSM-IV诊断为厌食症、贪食症和未另行规定的进食障碍。分析采用多变量方差分析和多项逻辑回归;对社会人口统计学和疾病严重程度指标进行了控制。
97%的患者有≥1种共病诊断;94%的患者有共病情绪障碍,主要是单相抑郁,在各种进食障碍中无差异;56%的患者有焦虑障碍,在各种进食障碍中无差异;22%的患者有物质使用障碍,在各种进食障碍中有显著差异(p<.0001)。有5种特定诊断在不同进食障碍中存在差异。贪食症患者酒精滥用/依赖的可能性是其他进食障碍患者的两倍(p<.0001);贪食症患者多种物质滥用/依赖的可能性是其他进食障碍患者的三倍(p<.0001);节食型和暴饮暴食/清除型厌食症患者患强迫症的可能性是其他进食障碍患者的两倍(p<.01);暴饮暴食/清除型厌食症患者患创伤后应激障碍的可能性是其他进食障碍患者的两倍(p<.05);节食型厌食症患者患精神分裂症/其他精神病的可能性是其他进食障碍患者的三倍(p<.05),暴饮暴食/清除型厌食症患者患精神分裂症/其他精神病的可能性是其他进食障碍患者的两倍(p<.05)。
出现了新的发现:无论进食障碍类型如何,共病率都极高;所有进食障碍中抑郁普遍存在;各种进食障碍中焦虑障碍的总体发生率无差异;暴饮暴食/清除型厌食症患者创伤后应激障碍更多;厌食症患者精神病诊断更多。某些先前的发现得到了证实:厌食症患者强迫症更多;贪食症患者物质使用更多;进食障碍患者共病的排序重复出现:分别为情绪障碍、焦虑障碍和物质使用障碍。