
Psychologists Investigate Cognitive Failings Of
Eating Disorder Sufferers
July 22, 2009
Sufferers of eating disorders have problems with certain mental tasks; this is
the finding of a comprehensive overview of studies examining the link between
cognitive deficits and eating disorders, published online in the Journal of
Neuropsychology today, 22nd July 2009.
Professor Konstantine Zakzanis from the University of Toronto carried out an
analysis of 27 studies that investigated the thinking of 608 anorexia nervosa
sufferers, and 14 studies of 347 bulimia nervosa patients to look for consistent
patterns in cognitive deficits.
Professor Zakzanis said: "Over the last 30 years, many psychological
studies have tested people with anorexia or bulimia on tasks such as decision
making, verbal memory and reaction times and have found that people with eating
disorders perform worse than people who don't have an eating disorder.
"In this overview we found consistent results that people with anorexia and
bulimia have significant problems with some cognitive processes, and as
sufferers' body mass decreased, the severity of their cognitive impairments
increased."
Anorexia sufferers were found to have particular impairments in spatial
perception and representation, which could explain the distorted assessment of
body image in patients with anorexia nervosa. Bulimia patients had less
significant impairments than anorexia sufferers overall, but a particular
impairment in impulsivity was observed, with 21 per cent of patients scoring
worse on measures of impulsivity when compared to people without an eating
disorder.
"These results tell us that people with eating disorders have particular
patterns of cognitive deficits. However, at this stage we do not know whether
these deficits are a result of abnormal eating patterns, malnutrition for
example, or whether these cognitive deficits result in, or affect the
progression of eating disorders," Professor Zakzanis continued. "If
cognitive deficits are behind eating disorders this could help us to understand
why certain people are affected and could help us to develop future
psychological treatments."
Source
British Psychological Society
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