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Psychosomatic Medicine, Vol 50, Issue 6 607-614, Copyright © 1988 by American Psychosomatic Society
ORIGINAL ARTICLES |
N Kobayashi, H Tamai, S Uehata, G Komaki, K Mori, S Matsubayashi and T Nakagawa
Department of Psychosomatic Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Kyushu University, Japan.
In patients with eating disorders, we evaluated pancreatic abnormalities using serum elastase 1 measurement by RIA and the 50 g oral glucose tolerance test (50 g OGTT). Twenty-one patients had anorexia nervosa (AN) with bulimia and vomiting (AN-B group), 30 had AN without bulimia or vomiting (AN-R group), and 25 had bulimia with normal body weight (B group). The serum elastase 1 level was determined on admission and repeated after body weight gain in 43 anorectic patients. The 50 g OGTT was performed within 2 weeks after admission. The serum elastase 1 level in the AN-B group (363 +/- 47 ng/dl, M +/- SE), and in the AN-R group (352 +/- 37) were significantly higher than that in the B group (242 +/- 18) or in the healthy female controls (191 +/- 10; n = 13). A significant decrease of serum elastase 1 was observed before and after body weight gain; however, there was no significant correlation between the serum elastase 1 level and insulin response to the 50 g OGTT. Elevation of the serum elastase 1 level in AN suggests pancreatic abnormalities other than those related to endocrinological events.
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