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Hypokalemia in outpatients with eating disorders
108
Citations
8
References
1995
Year
Hypokalemia prevalence in eating‑disordered patients is poorly understood and inconsistently reported. The study examined how often hypokalemia occurs and how it relates to purging behaviors in 945 outpatient eating‑disorder patients, using diagnostic evaluations and electrolyte measurements at intake. The authors performed comprehensive diagnostic and electrolyte assessments on all patients meeting DSM‑III‑R criteria for eating disorders at a suburban clinic. Only 4.6% of patients were hypokalemic, and these individuals had lower weight and BMI, purged more frequently with laxatives or vomiting, whereas patients with purely restricting anorexia nervosa remained normokalemic even at very low weight, showing that hypokalemia is a reliable indicator of daily purging and that routine electrolyte screening is an ineffective bulimia detection tool.
The literature on the prevalence and importance of hypokalemia in persons with eating disorders in contradictory and confusing. The authors investigated the frequency of hypokalemia and its relationship to symptoms in a group of outpatients with eating disorders.Diagnostic evaluations and electrolyte studies were performed for 945 outpatients meeting the DSM-III-R criteria for eating disorders at the time of their intake evaluations at a suburban clinic for eating disorders. A total of 43 subjects (4.6%) were hypokalemic; of these, seven (0.7% of all subjects) were borderline hypokalemic (serum potassium = 3.4 mmol/liter). The hypokalemic subjects had a significantly lower mean weight and body mass index at entry than the normokalemic subjects. Significantly more of the hypokalemic subjects purged by abusing laxatives, either alone or with vomiting. The patients with restricting (nonpurging) anorexia nervosa, even those whose weights were very low, were generally normokalemic.The low frequency of hypokalemia in this group of eating disordered outpatients suggests that routine electrolyte determination is a poor screening tool for occult or denied bulimia. Hypokalemia occurred almost invariably in lower-weight bulimic (or anorectic/bulimic) patients who were vomiting and/or abusing laxatives. Indeed, the study suggests that hypokalemia in a patient with an eating disorder is virtually certain evidence that the patient is purging at least daily. In addition, it appears that a patient with purely restricting anorexia nervosa is not at risk for hypokalemia even if his or her weight is very low.
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