• Source: Exercise bulimia
  • Exercise bulimia is a subset of the psychological disorder called bulimia in which a person is compelled to exercise in an effort aimed at burning the calories of food energy and fat reserves to an excessive level that negatively affects their health. The damage normally occurs through not giving the body adequate rest for athletic recovery compared to their exercise levels, leading to increasing levels of disrepair. If the person eats a normally healthy and adequate diet but exercises in levels they know require higher levels of nutrition, this can also be seen as a form of anorexia.


    Symptoms



    Exercise Bulimia can sometimes go unnoticed because exercise is something that is seen as healthy, but just because a person looks healthy does not mean they are. Compulsive exercisers will often schedule their lives around exercise just as those with eating disorders schedule their lives around eating (or not eating). Other indications of compulsive exercise are:

    Missing work, school and other important events in order to work out
    Working out with an injury or while sick
    Working out secretly or away from noticeable sight
    Becoming unusually depressed if unable to exercise
    Working out for hours at a time each day
    Not taking any rest or recovery days
    Defining self-worth in terms of performance
    Justifies excessive behavior by defining self as a "special" elite athlete
    Depression or agitation when unable to work out
    Amenorrhea, the stop of a woman's menstrual cycle
    Isolation from others while working out
    Lack of interest in friends and eating
    Lack of sleep


    See also


    Overtraining
    Anorexia athletica


    Notes




    References


    About.com Archived 2006-11-07 at the Wayback Machine Exercise & Eating
    Activity Disorders Archived 2012-10-13 at the Wayback Machine

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