Bingeing and purging are usually associated with eating disorders, particularly bulimia nervosa. These behaviours can have intense physical, emotional, and psychological consequences; it is, therefore, important to understand them to help create awareness and empathy as well as treatment approaches. This report discusses the definition of bingeing and purging, reviews their causes, discusses potential effects on the body and mind, and discusses effective treatment approaches.
What is Bingeing and Purging?
It is where an individual consumes enormous amounts of food in very little time. In the process of bingeing, one may feel a loss of control in terms of consumption, even when the person does not have any physical hunger. Bingeing involves consuming high-calorie food items, fats, or sugars. Nevertheless, no particular food item has been specially selected for this activity.
Purging is a compulsive behaviour where individuals get rid of body calories from a binge by intentionally vomiting. Self-induced vomiting is the most common way, although misuse of laxatives, diuretics, and extreme exercises can also fit under this heading. A person may try purifying to relieve the physical or emotional discomfort brought about by the binge, but most of the time, it turns vicious and creates even more emotional distress.
Causes of Bingeing and Purging
Understanding the causes behind such behaviours is very important to levy the treatments. There is no singular cause; however, several factors can contribute to the formation of such eating disorder patterns.
1. Psychological Factors
- Low self-esteem: Often individuals who engage in bingeing and purging have low self-esteem. They may feel inadequate or worthless and begin to perceive eating as a form of coping with emotional pain and negative thoughts.
- Emotional Regulation: Bingeing is a useful strategy for numbing or distracting unpleasant emotions like dread, depression, loneliness, or even rage. Purging then becomes necessary as a means of re-establishing control over those feelings or to moderate guilt at having consumed too much.
- Perfectionism: People who are perfectionistic or in quest of control could strive towards extremes in their eating behaviours. They have placed huge amounts of pressure to meet unreachable body standards or academic achievements, and when such a feeling arises that they cannot cope with it, fuels bingeing and purging behaviours.
2. Biological Factors
- Neurochemical Imbalance: There are findings to suggest that binge and purge disorders have neurochemical imbalances of serotonin and dopamine, linked with the regulation of the mood and hunger or reward pathways in the brain. These imbalances lead to distorted perceptions of hunger and satiety that impair disordered eating behaviour.
- Genetics: Several studies indicate that eating disorders appear to be inherited, both in and out of the family, with a predisposition to getting these disorders, such as bulimia nervosa. Some people have more of a tendency to acquire this disorder through inherited characteristics associated with mood regulation, impulsivity, or body dissatisfaction.
3. Sociocultural Factors
- Diet Culture: The hyper-normalisation of dieting, weight control, and dieting as a way of life exacerbates binge-purge cycles. Dieting, deprivation, and restriction may set up episodes of extreme hunger, which then give rise to binge episodes followed by purging to “undo” it all.
- Cultural Pressure: Societal standards of beauty take a form, in many instances, that proffers and earns emphasis on thinness or even lean physiques, which can cause body dissatisfaction among women and other youth populations. Media presentations of ideal body shape further harden a set of standards to which individuals tend to subscribe to as a way of maintaining the unattainable standards perceived by the media.
Effects of Bingeing and Purging
Both bingeing and purging have serious physical, emotional, and psychological effects. In most cases, these behaviours affect a person’s life in such an aspect: their health, relations, or personal self-esteem.
Physical Health Effects
- Dental Erosion: Stomach acid reflux can contribute to dental erosion as the stomach lining acid slowly wears away the enamel. Over time, this can result in exposed nerves, cavities, and eventually gum disease.
- Electrolyte Imbalances: Vomiting, especially or through laxative misuse leads to dangerous alterations in the electrolytes sodium, potassium and chloride. Such a condition leads to severe complications, including dehydration, irregular heartbeats, and even heart failure.
- Gastrointestinal Problems: Continuous purging affects the functioning of the gastrointestinal tract, creating chronic heartburn, acid reflux, and tears in the oesophagus. Long-term misuse of laxatives causes scars and damage to the intestines and interferes with normal bowel movements.
- Weight Fluctuations: Ironically enough, one of the unfortunate outcomes of bulimia is that bingeing and purging will often cause erratic fluctuations in weight. Frequent dieting, bingeing, and purging interfere with the body’s natural metabolism and usually make it harder to establish a healthy, stable weight.
Emotional and Psychological Consequences
- Anxiety and Depression: Bingeing and purging often are associated with major mental health disorders, like anxiety and depression. Many times these behaviours serve as a means of attempting to cope with emotional pain, but they also tend to contribute to worsening mental health over time.
- Shame and Guilt: Extremely shameful, guilty, and hating themselves after they binge and purge, these individuals feel extremely ashamed, guilty, and hateful toward themselves after the behaviour. The presence of these emotions helps to cement a pattern of self-hatred, which aids in perpetuating the behaviour.
- Social Isolation: Most people suffering from bingeing and purging episodes are also characterised by shame regarding their behaviours. These individuals will often withdraw from their friends and family members to hide their patterns of disordered eating. Social withdrawal creates an increment in feelings of loneliness and depression.
Treatment for Bingeing and Purging
The good news is that bingeing and purging are treatable behaviours. However, recovery requires a treatment approach that engages both the physical and emotional levels of these diseases.
1. Psychotherapy
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: CBT is one of the effective therapies for bulimia nervosa, and other such eating disorders. It helps the client to become aware of negative thought patterns, challenge them, and thereby transform wrong behaviour into right ones. A strong reduction in bingeing and purging is a result of improved emotional regulation.
- Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT): DBT is intended to teach the patient skills that could aid in dealing with emotional pain and to develop better means of dealing with triggers for emotions.
2. Nutritional Counselling
Collaboration with a registered dietitian allows patients to have a more positive and practical attitude towards food. Nutritional counselling may focus on developing a meal plan that does not focus on dieting but on healthy and regular consumption habits.
3. Medical Interventions
Severe cases of the situation may require medical interventions to treat the physical results of bingeing and purging. Some examples of such an intervention include hospitalisation due to electrolyte imbalance, malnutrition, or other complications. Some medication may be prescribed that can either resemble antidepressants or mood stabilisers to treat co-occurring mental health disorders or neurochemical imbalances that contribute to disordered eating behaviours.
4. Community and Support Groups
Peer support is an exceptionally valuable component of recovery. Where other people may be supported through either online or in-person support groups, the feeling of isolation will be lessened, and encouragement will come from other people who have gone through similar processes.
Bingeing and purging are complicated behaviours often found to be underlying deep psychological, biological, and social reasons. While physical and emotional consequences can be so intense, recovery is possible with proper treatment and support. Knowing the causes and effects of bingeing and purging can be the first step towards compassion, awareness, and ultimately healing.
References +
Bulimia nervosa. (2024, June 13). Cleveland Clinic. https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/9795-bulimia-nervosa
MSc, E. H. B., MA PhD. (2020, September 23). Understanding bingeing and purging. Verywell Mind. https://www.verywellmind.com/bingeing-and-purging-22148
Eating Disorder Hope. (2023, February 23). India Eating Disorder Treatment Resources & Information. https://www.eatingdisorderhope.com/treatment-for-eating-disorders/international/india
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