Proctor Kaitlin B, Rodrick Eugene, Belcher Staci, Sharp William G, Kindler Joseph M
Emory University School of Medicine and Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, Athens, GA, USA.
Department of Nutritional Sciences, University of Georgia, Room 279 Dawson Hall, 305 Sanford Drive, Athens, GA, 30606, USA.
J Eat Disord. 2023 Mar 22;11(1):44. doi: 10.1186/s40337-023-00766-3.
Avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) is an eating/feeding disturbance characterized by severe food avoidance or restriction that results in faltering growth, nutritional deficiencies, dependence on formula supplementation, and/or significant psychosocial impairment. Compared to other eating disorders, ARFID is observed to have an earlier childhood onset and chronic course without intervention. Childhood represents a sensitive period for longitudinal growth and bone accrual, setting the stage for long-term health outcomes associated with longevity and quality of life, including risk for fracture and osteoporosis.
This narrative review discusses published scientific literature on bone health in individuals with ARFID by describing the current understanding of ARFID's effect on bone health, how common dietary constraints characteristic of ARFID may present unique risks to bone health, and the current clinical recommendations for bone health assessment. Reviewing what is known of clinical data from anorexia nervosa (AN) and similar cohorts, the chronicity and etiology of dietary restriction observed in ARFID are hypothesized to compromise bone health significantly. Although limited, examination of bone health in ARFID patients suggests children with ARFID tend to have shorter stature compared to healthy reference datasets and have lower bone density compared to healthy individuals, similar to those with AN. There remains a substantial knowledge gap in how ARFID may interrupt bone accrual during childhood and adolescence, and subsequent impact on attainment of peak bone mass and peak bone strength. The longitudinal effects of ARFID may be subtle and overlooked clinically in the absence of severe weight loss or growth stunting. Early identification and remediation of threats to bone mass accrual have significant personal and population-level implications.
For patients with ARFID, delayed identification and intervention to address feeding disturbances may have a long-lasting impact on various body systems and processes, including those relating to longitudinal growth and bone mass accrual. Further research employing rigorous prospective observational and/or randomized study designs are required to clearly define effects of ARFID, as well as clinical interventions aimed at addressing ARFID-related feeding disturbances, on bone accrual.
回避性/限制性食物摄入障碍(ARFID)是一种进食/喂养障碍,其特征为严重的食物回避或限制,导致生长发育迟缓、营养缺乏、依赖配方奶补充,和/或严重的心理社会功能损害。与其他进食障碍相比,ARFID在儿童期发病更早且若不干预则病程呈慢性。儿童期是纵向生长和骨量积累的敏感期,为与长寿和生活质量相关的长期健康结果奠定基础,包括骨折和骨质疏松症风险。
本叙述性综述通过描述目前对ARFID对骨骼健康影响的理解、ARFID特有的常见饮食限制如何给骨骼健康带来独特风险,以及目前骨骼健康评估的临床建议,来讨论已发表的关于ARFID患者骨骼健康的科学文献。回顾从神经性厌食症(AN)和类似队列获得的临床数据可知,ARFID中观察到的饮食限制的慢性程度和病因被认为会显著损害骨骼健康。虽然数据有限,但对ARFID患者骨骼健康的检查表明,与健康对照数据集相比,ARFID儿童往往身材较矮,与健康个体相比骨密度较低,这与AN患者相似。在ARFID如何在儿童期和青春期中断骨量积累以及随后对达到峰值骨量和峰值骨强度的影响方面,仍存在相当大的知识空白。在没有严重体重减轻或生长发育迟缓的情况下,ARFID的纵向影响可能很细微且在临床上被忽视。早期识别和纠正对骨量积累的威胁具有重大的个人和人群层面意义。
对于ARFID患者,延迟识别和干预以解决喂养障碍可能会对包括与纵向生长和骨量积累相关的各种身体系统和过程产生长期影响。需要采用严格的前瞻性观察和/或随机研究设计进行进一步研究,以明确界定ARFID以及旨在解决与ARFID相关的喂养障碍的临床干预对骨量积累的影响。