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Eating Disorders May Disrupt Menstruation
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Eating Disorders May Disrupt Menstruation
"NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Any type of eating disorder can boost a woman's likelihood of having irregular menstrual periods, a new study confirms."

"Based on the findings, "when someone's got irregular menstruation, eating disorders should be on the radar screen," Dr. Cynthia M. Bulik of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the study's lead author, told Reuters Health. Missing periods raises a woman's risk of osteoporosis, Bulik noted, and may also impair fertility."

"According to current diagnostic criteria, anorexia nervosa is the only eating disorder subtype associated with menstrual irregularities, Bulik said. A woman must have absence of menstrual periods for at least three months to be diagnosed with anorexia nervosa."

"But in a survey of 1,705 women participating in a genetic study who met strict diagnostic criteria for eating disorders, Bulik and her team found menstrual irregularities including absence of periods, skipping periods, and very light periods among women with every subtype of eating disorder, including bulimia nervosa."

"Nearly 80 percent of women with anorexia reported secondary amenorrhea, meaning they had begun having periods before age 16 but had stopped menstruating for at least three months in a row at least once. About 36 percent of women with bulimia nervosa had secondary amenorrhea. Among women who fell into the "eating disorder not otherwise classified" group, 30.4 percent reported secondary amenorrhea."

"The factors most strongly associated with menstrual dysfunction included a person's body mass index (BMI), her calorie intake,
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