Dec 01, 2014
Brain Research Reveals New Hope for Patients with Anorexia Nervosa
Researchers from the Translational Developmental
Neuroscience Lab led by Professor Stefan Ehrlich at the
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
of the University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus at the TU Dresden
(Faculty of Medicine) used state-of-the-art magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) techniques to investigate the consequences of
anorexia nervosa on brain structure. Their novel findings
obtained by measuring “cortical thickness” for the first time
in the eating disorder are now published in the renowned
journal “Biological Psychiatry”. The authors conclude, “The
global thinning of cortical gray matter observed in acutely ill
adolescent patients can be completely reversed following
successful weight rehabilitation therapy”.
Previous studies of changes in brain structure associated with
anorexia nervosa were limited in their ability to clarify
important questions regarding the regional specificity and
persistence of anomalies following therapy. In contrast, the
analysis strategies employed by the Dresdener scientists in
their large sample of both acutely ill and long-term recovered
patients allowed for precise measurement of cortical gray
matter on a sub-millimeter scale at over 100,000 locations
across the entire surface of the brain. Prof. Stefan Ehrlich
explained, “Not only the spatial expanse but also the magnitude
of cortical gray matter thinning in acute anorexia nervosa is
noteworthy – comparable to that typically observed in
Alzheimer’s disease.”
Study participants underwent MRI scanning immediately following
admission to specialized eating disorder clinics at the
Dresdener University Hospital and following successful therapy
with complete restoration of normal weight, eating behavior and
menstruation. Roughly half of the patients that receive
treatment successfully maintain these criteria – it is an
extremely long road to long-term recovery for those afflicted
with anorexia nervosa.
“We observed complete normalization of cortical gray matter
thickness in the long-term weight rehabilitated patients in our
sample”, exclaimed Prof. Ehrlich, “which is a particularly
encouraging finding for those suffering from the disorder.”
However, while this study shows that changes in brain structure
can improve with therapy, anorexia nervosa may have other
serious long-term consequences that are not reversible, such as
reduction of bone mass due to osteoporosis.
FOCUS-Ranking TOP-Physicians 2014
The German news magazine „Focus“ publishes
highly-influential ranking lists of experts from various fields
of medicine based on data independently collected from e.g.
medical specialist societies, recommendations from clinic
directors, patient and self-help groups. In 2014, the
Focus-Ranking declared Prof. Stefan Ehrlich „Top-Physician“ in
the field of eating disorders.
A major focus of the Department of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry and Psychotherapy of the University Hospital Carl
Gustav Carus at the TU Dresden is the treatment of eating
disorders. Drawn by this expertise, patients come from every
corner of Germany to receive state-of-the-art therapy. Among
the services provided at the „ Eating Disorders Treatment and
Research Center“ include a specialized inpatient unit,
outpatient clinic and a family day clinic.
Publication:
Joseph A. King, Daniel Geisler, Franziska Ritschel, Ilka
Schober, Maria Seidel, Benjamin Roschinski, Laura Soltwedel,
Johannes Zwipp, Gerit Pfuhl, PhD, Michael Marxen, PhD, Veit
Roessner, MD, Stefan Ehrlich, MD: Global Cortical Thinning in
Acute Anorexia Nervosa Normalizes Following Long-Term Weight
Restoration; in: Biological Psychiatry, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2014.09.005
Photodownload (Photo: Stephan
Wiegand)
Information for journalists:
TU Dresden & University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus
Dresden
Eating Disorders Treatment and Research Center
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and
Psychotherapy
Prof. Stefan Ehrlich
Phone: +49 (0)351 458-2244
Fax: +49 (0)351 458-5754
www.uniklinikum-dresden.de
www.kjp-dresden.de