Card image cap
Intracranial hypertension may increase disordered eating

Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) is a situation where the pressure inside your head rises, causing vision problems, complications, and different symptoms. This takes place when fluid from the brain (called cerebrospinal fluid, or CSF) does not float out of the head because it should. When pressure across the mind is just too excessive it is able to put pressure on the optic nerve causing it to swell. This might also additionally ultimately harm the optic nerve, frequently causing vision loss. High pressure also can harm the nerves that flow to the eyes, inflicting double vision. Young humans with intracranial hypertension had an increased incidence of disordered eating behaviors, in keeping with examining consequences posted in Pediatric Neurology.

“Several pathophysiologic mechanisms have been offered to explain how obesity, as well as weight gain in nonobese individuals, contribute to the genesis of [intracranial hypertension (IIH)],” Itay Tokatly Latzer, MD, of the Pediatric Neurology Institute at Dana-Dwek Children’s Hospital in Israel, and colleagues wrote. “Correspondingly, obesity has also been identified as one of the independent risk factors for the development of [disordered eating behaviors]. “Nonetheless, despite one report of an increased risk of binge eating disorder in adults with IIH, the specific relationship between IIH and [disordered eating behaviors] has not been investigated in-depth, especially not in the pediatric population,” they added. Researchers aimed to elucidate the prevalence and predictors of disordered eating behaviors among people with IIH aged eight to 25 years. They included responses from 53 individuals with IIH and 106 healthy controls to a self-rating survey comprised of the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale and the Eating Attitude Test-26 that evaluated the presence of disordered eating behaviors.

Results confirmed an extensively better incidence of disordered eating behaviors amongst members with IIH. Participants with IIH and disordered eating behaviors had a better hazard for longer treatment durations and had misplaced a sizeable quantity of weight for the duration of remedy. The IIH institution had a better incidence of depression, anxiety, and strain than the manipulated institution, which had been connected to disordered ingesting behaviors amongst those people.

Photo by Tamas Pap on Unsplash

Category Cloud

Follow us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter