Facts About Twelve Most Common Digestive System Disorders

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Human digestive system is responsible for taking the food and liquid that we put into our mouth and turn it into either nutrients or energy needed by the cells of our body or into waste products that are then expelled by our body as bowel movements. Digestive system disorders occur when the process of digestion has a faulty function that does not allow some part of the digestion process to work correctly. There are many common digestive system disorders.

 There are twelve major  digestive system disorders:

Stomach Cancer

Stomach cancer is also called, gastric cancer. This cancer affected approximately 21,700 Americans during 2001. The majority of those individuals were in their 60s and 70s. The risk factors for developing stomach cancer are

Helicobacter pylori infection and a diet that consists of the following: eating large amounts of smoked foods, salted fish and meat, foods that are high in starch and low in fiber, pickled vegetables, and foods and beverages that contain nitrates and nitrites.

Stomach and Duodenal Ulcers

Ulcers are open sores or lesions. They are found in the skin or mucous membranes of areas of the body. A stomach ulcer is called a gastric ulcer and an ulcer in the duodenum is called a duodenal ulcer. Lifestyle, stress and diet

used to be thought to cause ulcers. These things may have a role in ulcer formation; they are not the main cause of them. Scientists now know that ulcers are caused by hydrochloric acid and pepsin that are contained in our stomach and duodenal parts of our digestive system and that these acids contribute to ulcer formation.

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

There are several different diseases that fall under this category all of which require a doctor for treatment. Ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease are two of these diseases.

Diverticular Disease

This disease occurs in small pouches that bulge out in the colon. It is an inflammation or infection in the pouches.

Colon and Rectal Cancer

Colorectal cancer is the second leading cause of death by cancer in the U.S.A. The number of new cases of colorectal cancer has decreased because in large part, the sigmoidoscopic screening and polyp removal procedures initiated by the medical community.

Diarrhea

Diarrhea is watery stool, or an increased frequency in stool, or both as compared to the normal amount of stool passed by the individual. Diarrhea can be short-term or it can be related to a bacterial or viral infection, or it can be long-term which is usually related to a functional disorder or intestinal disease.

Gas in the Digestive Tract

You get gas in your digestive tract by swallowing air or during the breakdown process of certain foods by the bacteria that is present in the colon. Everyone has gas. It can be uncomfortable and certainly embarrassing to pass the gas. The average person produces 1 to 3 pints of gas a day and pass gas through their rectums about 14 times each day.

Heartburn

Heartburn is what most of us get from time to time. Chronic heartburn is a digestive disorder called gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). GERD is caused by gastric acid that flows from the stomach and into the esophagus.

Hepatitis

This is an inflammation of the liver that can result in liver cell damage. There are two types of hepatitis - acute and chronic and six main types of the hepatitis virus.

Irritable Bowel Syndrome

Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is an intestinal disorder that causes cramping, gassiness, bloating and changes in the bowel habits of the individual with the disorder.

Lactose Intolerance

Individuals with lactose intolerance lack and enzyme called lactase. This enzyme is needed by the body to digest lactose. Lactose is a sugar found in milk products. Adults and children are affected by this intolerance. Digestive diseases or injuries to the small intestine cause this intolerance. Individuals can experience different symptoms but the common ones are: cramping, bloating, gas, diarrhea, and nausea. The symptoms will worsen when larger portions of milk products are consumed.

Colon and Rectal cancer is also referred to as colorectal cancer.

This type of cancer is a malignant cell that is found in the colon or rectum region of the body. The large intestine is made up of the colon and the rectum. Colon and rectal cancers share so many common features that they are referred to as the same cancer which is how the name colorectal cancer came about.

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Signs of Anorexia

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All types of media information advices the population more and more often to eat healthy and exercise daily to avoid obesity and other nutritional issues. Still, the message seems to be misunderstood as many persons, especially young girls become obsessed with loosing weight and counting calories; this is the negative part of the media tendencies and leads to the apparition of many eating disorders and dangerous physical and emotional consequences.

The most common and vital symptom of anorexia seems to be the irrational and uncontrolled fear of weight gain and body fat. This is however associated also with the will to become thinner and thinner even while loosing normal weight and becoming underweight.

Patients suffering from anorexia deny their problems and refuse to see the danger they expose their body to. These persons are usually very preoccupied with calories, fat grams and weight and become often angry and irascible when help is offered. The constant denial of having a major eating disorder turns into a difficult disease and also leads to a separation of the person from the society that is willing to help.

Warning signs of Anorexia seem sometimes very hard to observe as patients do their best to hide and deny any symptom or sign of their condition. They make huge efforts to avoid their family and friends to observe something is wrong as they are certain they are very fat, must loose weight and no one can help.

Anorexia patients refuse to keep at least a minimal accepted weight for their own age and height and become dramatically thinner every day; this is associated with a poor self image and low self respect. They seem to find excuses every time for skipping meals, eat very few foods only with little calories, weigh frequently and are attentive to the smallest weight change. The tendency of wearing large clothes is due to the need of hiding their body, excessive obsessive training program occupies a lot of time in their lives. Time is also controlled by the need of looking carefully into the mirror, looking for flaws.

Anorexia sufferers find excuses for skipping gatherings implying food and continuously complain about how fat they are. The most dramatic physical signs of the condition are low sexual appetite in men and irregular menstrual periods in women.

The two basic types of anorexia are:

1. Classic restrictive Anorexia involves very little calorie intake and excessive rapid weight loss. The food income is mostly insufficient to maintain normal vital functions.

2. Purging Anorexia works through self induced vomiting and excessive use of laxatives. This is called bulimic anorexia and associate low food intake with the need of purging after meals. Most patients with anorexia develop symptoms of additional bulimia.

For more information about anorexia or even about girls with anorexia please click this link http://www.anorexia-center.com/girls-with-anorexia.htm

Binge Eating Disorder

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Dr. Cederquist reviews a common eating disorder, Binge Eating-www.BistroMD.com.

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Bulimia Awareness Video

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This video is about a girl, like 8 million others, who suffer from Bulimia and other eating disorders. It is for all the people out there suffering from their own worst enemy: eating disorder. For all the voices lost to a society too quick to judge them. I hope the message this video conveys will open the eyes to the people who are fortunate not to have ED, but are able to lend a helping hand to help those in need of it.

Song Used: Brian Littrell: Over My Head

If you would like to speak out about your eating disorder or would like to talk about it, a forum is available:
http://s11.invisionfree.com/Beating_Disorders/index.php

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Anorexia, Bulimia & Compulsive Overeating

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http://es.video.yahoo.com/watch/2393413/7155876
MADAME SARKOZY
Anorexia (deriving from the Greek “α(ν)-” (a(n)-, a prefix that denotes absence) + “όρεξη (orexe) = appetite) is the decreased sensation of appetite. While the term in non-scientific publications is often used interchangeably with one of its causes, anorexia nervosa, there are many possible causes for a decreased appetite, some of which may be harmless while others pose significant risk for the person.

The most common form of anorexia is simply satiation following the consumption of food. This happens in all normal humans and is called postprandial anorexia. Disorders that cause (harmful) anorexia include anorexia nervosa, severe depression, cancer, Crohn’s Disease, Ulcerative Colitis, dementia, AIDS, Acute Radiation Syndrome, and chronic renal failure and the use of certain drugs, particularly stimulants and narcotics such as cocaine and heroin. Environmentally induced disorders such as altitude sickness can also trigger an acute form of anorexia. Anorexia may also be seen in congestive heart failure, perhaps due to congestion of the liver with venous blood.

Although the presenting symptom (the one which prompts a patient to seek medical attention) in acute appendicitis is abdominal pain, patients virtually always experience anorexia as well, possibly accompanied by an early episode of vomiting.

Some medications, antidepressants for example, can have anorexia as a side effect. Most notoriously, however, chemicals that are a member of the phenethylamine family are known to have more intense anorectic properties. For this reason, many individuals suffering from anorexia nervosa may seek to use these medications to suppress appetite. Such prescription medications include Ritalin, Adderall, Dexedrine, and Desoxyn. In some cases, these medications are prescribed to patients prior to undergoing an operation requiring general anesthesia. This is a prophylactic measure taken to ensure no food will back up into the esophagus and cause the patient to stop breathing during the procedure.

Anorexia nervosa is a psychiatric diagnosis that describes an eating disorder characterized by low body weight and body image distortion with an obsessive fear of gaining weight. Individuals with anorexia are known to commonly control body weight through the means of voluntary starvation, purging, vomiting, excessive exercise, or other weight control measures, such as diet pills or diuretic drugs. It primarily affects adolescent females, however approximately 10% of people with the diagnosis are male. Anorexia nervosa is a complex condition, involving psychological, neurobiological, and sociological components.[1]

The term anorexia is of Greek origin: a (α, prefix of negation), n (ν, link between two vowels) and orexis (ορεξις, appetite) thus meaning a lack of desire to eat.[2] A person who is diagnosed with anorexia nervosa is most commonly referred to with the adjectival form anorexic. The noun form, “anorectic” is generally not used in this context and usually refers to drugs that suppress appetite.

“Anorexia nervosa” is frequently shortened to “anorexia” in both the popular media and television reports. This is technically incorrect, as the term “anorexia” used separately refers to the medical symptom of reduced appetite (which therefore is distinguishable from anorexia nervosa in being non-psychiatric).

The most commonly used criteria for diagnosing anorexia are from the American Psychiatric ociation’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR) and the World Health Organization’s International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD).

Although biological tests can aid the diagnosis of anorexia, the diagnosis is based on a combination of behavior, reported beliefs and experiences, and physical characteristics of the patient. Anorexia is typically diagnosed by a clinical psychologist, psychiatrist or other suitably qualified clinician. Notably, diagnostic criteria are intended to ist clinicians, and are not intended to be representative of what an individual sufferer feels or experiences in living with the illness.

The full ICD-10 diagnostic criteria for anorexia nervosa can be found here, and the DSM-IV-TR criteria can be found here.

To be diagnosed as having anorexia nervosa, according to the DSM-IV-TR, a person must display:

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Reality

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Anorexia. The worst problem is that people who have suffer from it, don’t see it. Spot was on the air on 2005.

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Eating Disorders;what really happens

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*Song*

Creep-(originally by Radiohead)covered by Damien Rice

This isn’s thinspiration, this isnt an anti-eating disorder video, or anything close to that. This video was made to show how eating disorders effect certain people and the pain that is commonly ociated with them, along with different types of disorders. I used to have an eating disorder and just got an inspiration to share the sort of stages i went through. If you want a video of all emaciated women or are loking to hate on pro-ana’s, sorry, this isnt the video your looking for.

Thanks everyone for the feedback. Its so nice to know that this is reaching out to people. I also hope that this can add a little support to the millions of people out there suffering from not only eating disorders, but also from any other forms of pain that are unfortunately very common today. This is proof that your not alone, take care everyone.

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What is a healthy diet for people who have binge eating disorder and has a back ground in anerxia?

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I have been struggling with eating disorders for a while i first had anerxia then about a couple years later i now constantly binge eat (emothional eating) and i want to know what is the best diet that i should go on so i dont get to obsessed with losing weight and food but i lose about 10 punds and stop binge eating?

First check out what is your blood group and what diet is good for your health .

Basically there are 3 types of Diet

+ —– HIGHLY BENEFICIAL, FOOD ACTS LIKE MEDICINE
O —– NEUTRAL FOOD
X —– AVOID, FOOD ACTS LIKE A POISON

First check out what diet helps lose or gain weight and what diet is really good to be healthy based on your blood group .

-Blood group O is for Old.- Type O.

http://www.diskovery.co.in/how_to_loose_weight__how_to_gain_weight

“FOODS ENCOURAGE WEIGHT GAIN”
Sweetcorn
Kidney beans
Cabbage
Brussel sprout
Cauliflower

“FOODS ENCOURAGE WEIGHT LOSS”
Liv 52
Sea food
Iodized salt
Liver
Red meat
Spinach
Broccoli

-Blood group A is for Agrarian.-__ Type A.

http://www.diskovery.co.in/how_to_loose_weight__how_to_gain_weight

“FOODS ENCOURAGE WEIGHT GAIN”
Meat
Dairy foods
Kidney beans
Lima beans
Wheat

“FOODS ENCOURAGE WEIGHT LOSS”
Liv 52
Vegetable oils
Soya foods
Vegetables
Pineapple

-Blood group B is for Balance.-__ Type B.

http://www.diskovery.co.in/how_to_loose_weight__how_to_gain_weight

“FOODS ENCOURAGE WEIGHT GAIN”
Lentils
Sweetcorn
Peanuts
Sesame seeds
Buckwheat
Wheat

“FOODS ENCOURAGE WEIGHT LOSS”
Liv 52
Green vege
Meat
Lamb Liver
Eggs

__ Blood group Type AB.

http://www.diskovery.co.in/how_to_loose_weight__how_to_gain_weight

“FOODS ENCOURAGE WEIGHT GAIN”
Red meat
Kidney beans
Seeds
Sweetcorn
Buckwheat

“FOODS ENCOURAGE WEIGHT LOSS”
Liv 52
Tofu
Seafood
Green vege
Dairy products
Alkaline fruits
Pineapples

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Is it possible to have a disorder similar to bulimia that applies to other things besides food?

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I think I have a disorder that is like bulimia but doesn't involve eating.

The same habits are present, binging and purging, feeling out of control.

For example, I will spend lots of money one week and then when I feel out of control I will be extremely frugal and then when i feel back in control I do things to lose that feeling.

This also applies to organization. I will obsessively clean and become very organized, only to gradually become more and more messy and out of control with clutter until I feel completely out of control and then I will continue the cycle.

What does this sound like? Bipolar? I'm planning on seeing a doctor but I wanted to see if anyone could take a guess on what this might be.

I really do not know what to say other than I do not see what you have as similar to bulimia since bulimia is strictly an eating disorder and has causes particular to it.

It is possible that you have depression, anxiety, bi-polar, OCD, etc., but the best thing to do is not try to second guess what the problem is before you see your doctor. I do understand your desire to figure this out but I think you and your doctor should do it together. Sometimes, a suggestion to a set of symptoms will actually cause you to focus more on them, which could delay getting a good diagnosis and the right help.

LISSA

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Do you think compulsive overeating is lack of willpower or an addiction?

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I strongly believe it is an addiction and even more difficult to control because food is a necessity, not like heroin or cocaine.

I truly believe that it's an addiction. Instead of being addicted to crack or cocaine, you have the food there as being more affordable than illegal drugs.

Complusive eating is on way a person may get rid of stress also. It's just another battle for someone to overcome.

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