Significant Warning Signs You May Have A Mental Disorder

Major Shifts in Eating Habits

a girl binge eating. Photo Credit: ErasmusUniversiteITRotterdam

Individuals who experience major shifts in their eating habits without any known physical cause could have a mental disorder. One of the most common shifts is a loss of appetite associated with depression. Individuals with depression or other mood disorders may feel listless, lethargic, and like they either aren't hungry or don't have the energy to eat. In a similar vein, patients with anxiety disorders may be too anxious to eat. Depression can also present with sudden bingeing and comfort eating. An entire class of mental health disorders, eating disorders, is based around food-related neuroses. Anorexia nervosa patients tend to restrict their calorie intake, become obsessed with their weight, make up food-related rules for their lives, and experience extreme distress when forced to change those routines. With bulimia, patients go through periods of bingeing followed by purging through laxatives, vomiting, or other means. Binge eating disorder is an eating disorder in which affected individuals eat excessively and feel out of control, but don't purge afterward.

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