Food for Thought

Cutaneous Signs of Malnutrition Secondary to Eating Disorders

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Patients with eating disorders (EDs) frequently experience malnutrition that may lead to nutritional dermatoses. Effects of malnutrition and starvation on the skin may include xerosis, lanugo, pruritus, acrocyanosis, carotenoderma, telogen effluvium, and other hair and mucosal findings. Although these dermatologic sequelae often are reported among patients with EDs, the pathomechanisms of these cutaneous symptoms are poorly understood. This article reviews the existing literature on nutritional dermatoses to clarify visible signs that should heighten clinical suspicion for an underlying ED. The skin may present the first visible signs of an otherwise occult ED diagnosis, offering the dermatologist a special opportunity for early diagnosis and coordination with a multidisciplinary team for ED treatment.

Practice Points

  • Cutaneous manifestations of malnutrition may be the presenting sign of disordered eating.
  • Dermatologists have a unique opportunity for early recognition and intervention in patients with eating disorders (EDs).
  • Rapid identification and multidisciplinary management of EDs may improve patient outcomes and potentially attenuate the risk of irreversible damage from malnutrition.


 

References

Eating disorders (EDs) and feeding disorders refer to a wide spectrum of complex biopsychosocial illnesses. The spectrum of EDs encompasses anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), binge eating disorder, and other specified feeding or eating disorders. Feeding disorders, distinguished from EDs based on the absence of body image disturbance, include pica, rumination syndrome, and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID).1

This spectrum of illnesses predominantly affect young females aged 15 to 45 years, with recent increases in the rates of EDs among males, patients with skin of color, and adolescent females.2-5 Patients with EDs are at an elevated lifetime risk of suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, and other psychiatric comorbidities compared to the general population.6 Specifically, AN and BN are associated with high psychiatric morbidity and mortality. A meta-analysis by Arcelus et al7 demonstrated the weighted annual mortality for AN was 5.10 deaths per 1000 person-years (95% CI, 3.57-7.59) among patients with EDs and 4.55 deaths for studies that selected inpatients (95% CI, 3.09-6.28); for BN, the weighted mortality was 1.74 deaths per 1000 person-years (95% CI, 1.09-2.44). Unfortunately, ED diagnoses often are delayed or missed in clinical settings. Patients may lack insight into the severity of their illness, experience embarrassment about their eating behaviors, or actively avoid treatment for their ED.8

Pica—compulsive eating of nonnutritive substances outside the cultural norm—and rumination syndrome—regurgitation of undigested food—are feeding disorders more commonly recognized in childhood.9-11 Pregnancy, intellectual disability, iron deficiency, and lead poisoning are other conditions associated with pica.6,9,10 Avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder, a new diagnosis added to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition (DSM-5)1 in 2013, is an eating or feeding disturbance resulting in persistent failure to meet nutritional or energy needs. Etiologies of ARFID may include sensory sensitivities and/or a traumatic event related to eating, leading to avoidance of associated foods.12

Patients with an ED or a feeding disorder frequently experience malnutrition, including deficiencies, excesses, or imbalances in nutritional intake, which may lead to nutritional dermatoses.13 As a result, the skin may present the first visible clues to an ED diagnosis.8,14-19 Gupta et al18 organized the skin signs of EDs into 4 categories: (1) those secondary to starvation or malnutrition; (2) cutaneous injury related to self-induced vomiting; (3) dermatoses due to laxative, diuretic, or emetic use; and (4) other concomitant psychiatric illnesses (eg, hand dermatitis from compulsive handwashing, dermatodaxia, onychophagia, trichotillomania). This review will focus on the effects of malnutrition and starvation on the skin.

Skin findings in patients with EDs offer the treating dermatologist a special opportunity for early diagnosis and appropriate consultation with specialists trained in ED treatment. It is important for dermatologists to be vigilant in looking for skin findings of nutritional dermatoses, especially in populations at an increased risk for developing an ED, such as young female patients. The approach to therapy and treatment must occur through a collaborative multidisciplinary effort in a thoughtful and nonjudgmental environment.

Xerosis

Xerosis, or dry skin, is the most common dermatologic finding in both adult and pediatric patients with AN and BN.14,19 It presents as skin roughness, tightness, flaking, and scaling, which may be complicated by fissuring, itching, and bleeding.20 In healthy skin, moisture is maintained by the stratum corneum and its lipids such as ceramides, cholesterol, and free fatty acids.21 Natural moisturizing factor (NMF) within the skin is composed of amino acids, ammonia, urea, uric acid, inorganic salts, lactic acid derivatives, and pyrrolidine-3-carboxylic acid.20-22 Disruptions to this system result in increased transepidermal water loss and impaired barrier function.23

In patients with ED, xerosis arises through several mechanisms. Chronic illness or starvation can lead to euthyroid sick syndrome with decreased peripheral conversion of thyroxine (T4) to triiodothyronine (T3).24,25 In the context of functional hypothyroidism, xerosis can arise from decreased eccrine gland secretion.26 Secretions of water, lactate, urea, sodium, and potassium from eccrine glands help to maintain NMF for skin hydration.27 Persistent laxative or diuretic abuse and fluid intake restriction, which are common behaviors across the spectrum of EDs, lead to dehydration and electrolyte imbalances that can manifest as skin dryness.20 Disrupted keratinocyte differentiation due to insufficient stores of vitamins and minerals involved in keratinocyte differentiation, such as vitamins A and C, selenium, and zinc, also may contribute to xerosis.25,28,29

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