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Wednesday, March 12, 2008

New Home.....

Ok, i havent been properly updating this site for two reasons... a) i've been away at training with no net access and b) for some reason the military likes to block xanga on its computers but not livejournal. so for mainly reason b Ana In The News has a new home at www.AnaInTheNews.blogspot.com and will soon be getting its own domain name!!!!!!!!!! *squee* please do check it out and continue to check it regulary since i am not in a position where i can update it.


Friday, December 21, 2007

Girls get anorexia 'because their brains are wired differently'

Stick-thin models such as Kate Moss do not encourage young women to become anorexic, say scientists.

The trend for size-zero models is often blamed for triggering the eating disorder in young women seeking to emulate their catwalk idols.

But, in research that rejects the theory, scientists say that the brains of those with anorexia are wired differently to those of the rest of us.

Those who develop anorexia are born with a susceptibility to the condition, they say.

Although it is not clear why this might be, other researchers have suggested that the risk of developing anorexia could be inherited or might be down to a fault in brain development at a young age.

Professor Walter Kaye, who carried out the research, said: "This piece of research points to the fact that the brains of people with anorexia are wired differently.

"This means they react and think in different way to the ordinary person and that they are likely to go to develop anorexia regardless of whether they have been exposed to images of superthin models."

Professor Kaye, of the University of Pittsburgh, added: "If it was simply impressionable young girls and women wanting to look like a supermodel, then we would have hundreds of thousands of anorexics.

"The number of young women and men who develop anorexia is relatively small, mercifully - and what we are really looking at is a condition that is already predisposed in some."

Psychiatrists in the U.S. studied the brain activity of a group of former anorexics with that of a group of normal volunteers.

They found that the two groups' brains performed differently during a series of tests of emotional responses.

Compared to the healthy volunteers, former anorexics gained no pleasure from winning rewards.

Lily Cole

Models like Lily Cole are not to blame for anorexia

Professor Kaye, whose research was reported in The American Journal of Psychiatry, said: "A year or more after recovery, these former anorexics still had difficulty in enjoying simple pleasures.

"What this points to is that anorexics have something different going on in their brains which marks them out has having either different structures in the brain or different pathways for processing of thought, that stay with them for life.'

Dr Ian Frampton, a psychologist a Exeter University has been working with anorexics using the same technology.

The U.S. research supports a growing feeling that anorexia is caused by brain structure, he said.

"You would expect a lot more anorexics than we currently have if it was down to advertising and peer pressure and images of famous models like Kate Moss.

"These youngsters have something going on in their brain that is different.

"We are not totally sure what is happening, but we think that some of this might be inherited or some might be due to a fault in the developing brain either in the womb or during early childhood.

"We need to move away from this idea that supermodels are to blame."

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/health/healthmain.html?in_article_id=502705&in_page_id=1774&ito=1490


Anorexia ‘cannot be picked up by looking at photographs of super-thin models’

Anorexia may be caused by inherited differences in the way a sufferer’s brain operates, leading to obsessive behaviour, according to research.

Rather than being triggered by images of super-thin models and celebrities, the eating disorder could be brought on by the in-built way in which the brain responds to pleasure and reward. It has been argued that images of unhealthily thin stars in the media have encouraged anorexic behaviour in impressionable young women. But a study published in The American Journal of Psychiatry suggests that the brains of anorexia sufferers behave differently to those of the rest of the population and that certain people are born with a susceptibility to develop the condition.

A team of psychiatrists, led by Walter Kaye, of the University of Pittsburgh, tested the emotional responses of 13 former anorexics compared with those of 13 nonsufferers.

The women were asked to play a computer game where correct guesses were rewarded financially. During the test, the team used functional MRI scans to monitor the participants’ brain activity by measuring blood levels in certain areas.

Among the nonsufferers, the brain region connected to emotional responses – the anterior ventral striatum – showed strong differences between winning and losing the game. Among the women with a history of anorexia, however, there was little difference in activity between winning and losing.

Professor Kaye said: “In anorexia, this might impact on food enjoyment. For anorexics, then, perhaps it is difficult to appreciate immediate pleasure if it does not feel much different from a negative experience.”

Another brain area, the caudate, involved in linking actions to outcome and planning, was far more active in the recovering anorexics than in the control group. The former tended to have exaggerated worries about the consequences of their behaviours, looked for rules where there were none and were overly concerned about making mistakes.

“There are some positive aspects to this kind of temperament. Paying attention to detail and making sure things are done as correctly as possible are constructive traits in careers such as medicine or engineering,” Professor Kaye said. “But carried to extremes, such obsessive thinking can be harmful, which is what happens in anorexia. This piece of research points to the fact that the brains of people with anorexia are wired differently.

“This means they react and think in different ways to the ordinary person and that they are more likely to go on to develop anorexia regardless of whether they have been exposed to images of super-thin models.”

Professor Kaye said that his study showed that even former anorexics still had difficulty enjoying simple pleasures. “What this points to is that anorexics have something different going on in their brains, which marks them out as having either different structures in the brain or different pathways for processing thought that stay with them for life. We may be able, with a lot of hard work, to get them back to eating, but deep down in their brain there appear to be biological differences that don’t go away.”

Ian Frampton, a psychologist at Exeter University, has been working with anorexics using the same MRI technology. He said: “Professor Kaye’s research supports a growing feeling that anorexia is a biological condition caused by the brains of some people being structured in a different way. We are still conducting our research, but we are seeing similar things.

“We are not totally sure what is happening in these youngsters but we think that some of this might be inherited or some might be due to a fault in the developing brain either in the womb or during early childhood.”

Dr Frampton said that while all adolescent girls have issues about body image, for most it is a passing phase: “We need to move away from this idea that supermodels are to blame. It is probably not good for them to look as they do. But for anorexics, the desire not to eat and to be thin seems to be already in them and not something they can pick up by looking at a magazine.

“There were, after all, anorexics before super-thin models.”

Possible triggers

–– Recognition of anorexia nervosa dates from work in London and Paris in 1873, but a disorder apparently resembling it was first written about by John Reynolds, a physician and minister, in 1669
–– Beat, the eating disorders charity, says that a disorder is unlikely to result from a single cause. Potential triggers include low self-esteem, problems with friends or family relationships, the death of someone special, problems at work or university, sexual or emotional abuse
–– The most likely group to be affected are young women, especially those aged 15 to 25
–– About 90,000 people in Britain are estimated to be receiving treatment
–– The effects of anorexia, other than weight loss, can include constipation, dizzy spells, bloated stomach, downy hair on the body, poor blood circulation, loss of periods, loss of interest in sex and loss of bone mass, eventually leading to osteoporosis

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article3060191.ece


Female hormones in womb may play part in anorexia

New York, December 17: Anorexia is 10 times as common in women as in men, and a new study suggests that female sex hormones in the womb may play a part.

Researchers used the Swedish twin registry to study 4,226 pairs of female twins, 3,451 pairs of male twins and 4,478 pairs of opposite-sex twins, all born from 1935 to 1958. They found 51 cases of anorexia among the female twins, 3 among the male twins and 36 among the opposite-sex pairs. The study was published in the December issue of The Archives of General Psychiatry.

As expected, the risk of anorexia in female twins was higher than in male twins. But in the opposite-sex twins, 16 anorexia cases, almost half, were in males. In other words, the male member of a male-female twin pair had a risk for anorexia statistically no different from the risk among females.

Studies have shown that shared family environment has little effect on the development of anorexia. Instead, the researchers theorise, the shared intrauterine environment of male-female twin pairs leads to the increased risk for the males. Female sex hormones may influence neurodevelopment and later risk for anorexia.

“Anorexia is a dangerous illness,” said Dr Marco Procopio, lead author and a research fellow at the University of Sussex in Brighton, England. “It’s important that we be aware of the early signs of the disease.”

http://www.indianexpress.com/story/251513.html


Ricci battled with anorexia

Dec. 18, 2007 07:42 AMChristina Ricci's teenage battle with anorexia stopped her enjoying her fame.

The 'Black Snake Moan' star felt pressured to conform to the Hollywood ideal of perfection and admits the struggle made her unhappy.

Christina, 27, said: "I was a teenager going through adolescence and at one point I had a little anorexia phase and then I kind of ballooned. I feel my body now is the adult Christina and it's what I should have come to a long time ago if I hadn't been screwing around with my body so much.

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"I was too busy thinking about my skin or my weight or the clothes I was wearing instead of just enjoying it and saying, 'I can't believe I get to be here. This is awesome and I'm going to experience it.' "

The actress - who is about to star opposite James McAvoy and Reese Witherspoon in new romantic comedy 'Penelope' - admits she is vain, but she has learned not to obsess about her looks.

She added to US TV show 'Entertainment Tonight': "The more weight you give your criticisms, the more it's going to affect you.

"Vanity is unnecessary. I'm the vainest person around but I have found a way to let that go so I can just have fun. You really have to make a decision in life that you're not going to be crippled by your insecurities."

http://www.azcentral.com/ent/celeb/articles/1218ricci-CR.html

 



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