OBJECTIVE: The authors describe the distribution of bulimia nervosa
among males and identify characteristics that distinguish male bulimics
from their female counterparts. METHOD: Potential references were
identified through an English-language literature search using MEDLINE
(1966 to April 1990) and through extensive manual searching of textbooks
and reviews. All published works with original data or hypotheses
concerning bulimia in males were included. RESULTS: Bulimia affects
approximately 0.2% of adolescent boys and young adult men, and males
account for 10%-15% of all bulimic subjects identified in community-based
studies. Compared to their female counterparts, male bulimics appear to
have a later age of onset; higher prevalences of premorbid obesity,
homosexuality, and asexuality; and less concern with strict weight control.
These findings are discussed from biological, psychological, and cultural
perspectives to develop a fuller understanding of the pathogenesis of
bulimia in males. CONCLUSIONS: Bulimia in males has received relatively
little attention in the literature. Future research should focus on more
rigorous analytic studies that include matched comparison groups of female
bulimic and male nonbulimic subjects. Such studies would not only benefit
male bulimics but might provide insight into the nature of bulimia in both
sexes.
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