Lawson are with Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Eating Disorders Clinical and Research Program, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.
Lawson are with Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Eating Disorders Clinical and Research Program, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.
J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2020 Feb;59(2):209-212. doi: 10.1016/j.jaac.2019.09.037. Epub 2019 Nov 26.
Avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) is a feeding/eating disorder introduced in the fifth edition of the DSM-5 that is characterized by inadequate volume and/or variety of food intake. ARFID represents an expansion of the prior DSM-IV disorder "Feeding Disorder of Early Childhood" that can be diagnosed across the lifespan.DSM-5 clearly states that ARFID cannot be diagnosed in the context of significant shape/weight concerns and associated behaviors. However, our clinical team has observed multiple instances in which adolescent girls have presented with frank ARFID and simultaneously reported, or ultimately developed, traditional eating-disorder psychopathology. The following two cases are representative of the most common presentations of this diagnostic overlap that we have seen. We discuss possible reasons for this overlap and suggest two revisions to DSM criteria that may help in treatment planning for this unexpected comorbidity. Each patient provided written consent for her case to be included.
回避/限制型食物摄入障碍(ARFID)是在 DSM-5 第五版中引入的一种进食/摄食障碍,其特征是食物摄入量不足的量和/或种类。ARFID 代表了先前 DSM-IV 障碍“幼儿期喂养障碍”的扩展,可在整个生命周期中诊断。DSM-5 明确指出,在存在明显体型/体重问题和相关行为的情况下,不能诊断为 ARFID。然而,我们的临床团队观察到多个青少年女孩出现明显的 ARFID,同时报告或最终出现传统的饮食障碍心理病理学的情况。以下两个案例是我们观察到的这种诊断重叠的最常见表现,具有代表性。我们讨论了这种重叠的可能原因,并提出了对 DSM 标准的两项修订建议,这可能有助于治疗计划中处理这种意外的共病。每位患者均书面同意将其病例纳入研究。