Kirsten Hørder
Odense University Hospital
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Featured researches published by Kirsten Hørder.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2011
René Klinkby Støving; Alin Andries; Kim Brixen; Niels Bilenberg; Kirsten Hørder
Eating disorders (EDs) are uncommon in males. The majority of outcome studies on ED have not presented gender-specific results, mostly because of small study samples or exclusion of males. Furthermore, psychometric tools and outcome criteria used in ED have mainly been validated for females only. The objective of this study was to evaluate gender differences in weight restoration in different EDs. We studied the male representation and outcome in a large retrospective single centre cohort, the Funen Anorexia Nervosa Study (FANS). A total of 1015 patients were included in the study. A total of 356 (35%) patients were diagnosed with anorexia nervosa (AN), 298 (29%) with eating disorder not otherwise specified (EDNOS) and 361 (36%) with bulimia nervosa (BN). The male fractions in AN and EDNOS were similar, but significantly lower in BN. When remission was defined as body weight restoration to at least 85% of ideal body weight (IBW) and no self-reported binge or purgative behaviors in six months, the median time from onset to remission for patients with AN was significantly shorter for males: 7 years for females vs. 3 years for males. Among patients with a 5 years history of disease, remission rates in AN were 39% for females vs. 59% for males. The median time to remission for patients with EDNOS was similar to that of AN: 6 years for females vs. 3 years for males. In patients with EDNOS, 45% of the females remitted within 5 years vs. 77% of the males. With regard to body weight restoration and remission of purging behavior, this study suggests a better outcome for males than for females.
Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2009
René Klinkby Støving; Alin Andries; Kim Brixen; Allan Flyvbjerg; Kirsten Hørder; Jan Frystyk
Anorexia nervosa (AN) has the highest mortality rate between psychiatric disorders, and evidence for managing it is still very limited. So far, pharmacological treatment has focused on a narrow range of drugs and only a few controlled studies have been performed. Furthermore, the studies have been of short duration and included a limited number of subjects, often heterogenic with regard to stage and acute nutritive status. Thus, novel approaches are urgently needed. Body weight homeostasis is tightly regulated throughout life. With the discovery of orexigenic and anorectic signals, an array of new molecular targets to control eating behavior has emerged. This review focuses on recent advances in three important signal systems: leptin, ghrelin, and endocannabinoids toward the identification of potential therapeutical breakthroughs in AN. Our review of the current literature shows that leptin may have therapeutic potentials in promoting restoration of menstrual cycles in weight restored patients, reducing motor restlessness in severely hyperactive patients, and preventing osteoporosis in chronic patients. Ghrelin and endocannabinoids exert orexigenic effects which may facilitate nutritional restoration. Leptin and endocannabinoids may exert antidepressive and anxiolytic effects. Finally, monitoring serum concentration of leptin may be useful in order to prevent refeeding syndrome.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2012
René Klinkby Støving; Alin Andries; Kim Brixen; Niels Bilenberg; Mia Beck Lichtenstein; Kirsten Hørder
Purging behavior in eating disorders is associated with medical risks. We aimed to compare remission rates in purging and non-purging females with anorexia nervosa (AN) and eating disorder not otherwise specified (EDNOS) in a large retrospective single center cohort. A total of 339 patients with AN and 266 patients with EDNOS were included in the study. The proportion of subjects with purging behavior at least once a week during the last 3 months was similar in the two groups: 22% in AN and 24% in EDNOS. Remission was defined by a goal weight ≥85% of ideal body weight and no reported purging behavior in the last 6 months. The median time from onset to remission for patients with AN was 7 years for the non-purging vs. 11 years for the purging patients. The purging AN patients with both vomiting and laxative abuse displayed the poorest course. Among EDNOS patients, the time to remission was also significantly longer for purging patients compared to non-purging patients. Thus, in line with previous studies, we found that purging behavior is associated with delayed time to remission in treatment-seeking AN and EDNOS patients. This study provides evidence to support the retention of the diagnostic sub-typing in AN.
International Journal of Eating Disorders | 2012
Janni Schmidt Holm; Kim Brixen; Alin Andries; Kirsten Hørder; René Klinkby Støving
OBJECTIVE Involuntary treatment in the prevention of fatal anorexia nervosa (AN) is still controversial. METHOD Five fatal cases of AN were identified out of 1,160 patients who attended a specialized eating disorder unit between 1994 and 2006. Information on inpatient, ambulatory, and emergency room treatment was extracted from a population-based registration system. RESULTS Personality disorders were diagnosed in all five patients and substance abuse in three patients. In all cases, illness duration was more than 10 years and late onset was seen in two cases. None of the deaths were due to suicide. Involuntary hospital admission was instituted for three patients, but only one patient was compulsory detained more than once. Four patients died after having discontinued treatment. DISCUSSION Compulsory treatment may be of crucial importance in the prevention of fatalities in patients with long-standing AN and psychiatric comorbidity who discontinue treatment.
Nutrition | 2011
René Klinkby Støving; Linnéa E. Lingqvist; Rasmus K. Bonde; Alin Andries; Marianne H. Hansen; Marianne Andersen; Kirsten Hørder
OBJECTIVE Hypokalemia is a potentially life-threatening electrolyte disturbance in anorexia nervosa and is most frequently caused by purging behavior. We report a case of severe hypokalemia in anorexia nervosa induced by daily ingestion of approximately 20 g of licorice. METHODS To confirm the diagnosis of licorice-induced pseudohyperaldosteronism, a re-exposure trial was performed. RESULTS Cessation of the licorice intake normalized plasma potassium, renin, and aldosterone levels and the urine cortisol/cortisone ratio. Re-exposure confirmed the diagnosis. The pronounced response to a relatively low daily dose of licorice suggests high glycyrrhizin sensitivity. CONCLUSION Patients with anorexia nervosa not only have decreased food intake but also selective and sometimes bizarre eating habits that, in association with increased sensitivity to glycyrrhizin, may cause severe hypokalemia.
Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2009
Ida Ringsborg Madsen; Kirsten Hørder; René Klinkby Støving
Eating disorder during pregnancy is associated with a diversity of adverse outcomes and is of potential danger to both mother and child. There is, however, a tendency for remission of the eating disorder during pregnancy with improvement of symptoms such as restrictive dieting, binging and purging, and some women actually manage to put the disease behind them. This case report describes five women with different eating disorders and focuses on the symptomatology during pregnancy and in the months postpartum. The discussion deals with the possible psychological, social and endocrinological reasons for remission and the subsequent relapse, the definition of recovery and the factors which should alert health care professionals of the at-risk pregnancies in cases of undisclosed eating disorder. Furthermore, therapeutic interventions are proposed.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2015
Laura Al-Dakhiel Winkler; Niels Bilenberg; Kirsten Hørder; René Klinkby Støving
Eating disorders (EDs) are psychiatric disorders associated with high morbidity and mortality. It is well established that patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) have an increased risk of premature death, whereas mortality data are lacking for the other EDs. This study aimed to establish mortality rates in a sample of ED patients (n=998) with a mean follow-up of 12 years. This was compared to previous data from the same catchment area before a multidisciplinary centre was established. The standardized mortality ratio (SMR) was calculated. To compare the two cohorts, adjusted crude ratios were calculated with the confounding variables: body mass index (BMI), age at referral and diagnosis. In the latest cohort the SMR for AN was 2.89 vs 11.16 in the time before our specialization. SMR for bulimia nervosa (BN) and for eating disorder not otherwise specified (EDNOS) in the latest cohort were 2.37 and 1.14 respectively. When comparing two retrospective cohorts it is not possible to draw a definite conclusion, however the present study supports that integrating a somatic unit in a multidisciplinary centre may have a favourable influence on mortality in AN.
International Journal of Eating Disorders | 2009
Laura Vad Winkler; Marianne Andersen; Kirsten Hørder; Thorsten Schumann; René Klinkby Støving
BACKGROUND Craniopharyngiomas are slow-growing tumors, which can either be asymptomatic or present themselves with visual, neuropsychiatric or endocrine disturbances. Eating disorders (EDs) are syndromes with unknown etiology, associated with multiple endocrine abnormalities. In pediatric cases the presentation of EDs may differ markedly from those of adults. OBJECTIVE We report on two pediatric patients with craniopharyngioma misinterpreted as ED. METHOD Available patient records, psychiatric examinations, neuro-radiographic imaging, and biochemical data were evaluated. DISCUSSION The reported cases illustrate the importance to consider slow-growing craniopharyngioma in ED. Especially in atypical ED, neuro-radiographic, ophthalmologic and endocrine examination should be carried out. Furthermore, structural hypothalamic lesions in these cases mimicking features of ED, suggesting the possibility of an as yet unidentified structural hypothalamic disorder to be implicated in the etiopathogeny of ED.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2017
Laura Al-Dakhiel Winkler; Jacob Stampe Frølich; Claire Gudex; Kirsten Hørder; Niels Bilenberg; René Klinkby Støving
Patient-reported outcome is increasingly applied in health sciences. Patients with eating disorders (EDs) characteristically have a different opinion of their needs to that of the health professionals, which can lead to ambivalence towards treatment and immense compliance difficulties. This cross-sectional study compared data assessed by the clinician to patient-reported measures in patients with a history of EDs. We included data from a cohort of patients with EDs (n=544) referred to a specialized ED unit in Denmark. Patient-reported measures included the Eating Disorder Inventory-2 (EDI-2) and the Short Form 36 (SF-36), and clinical data included remission status and body mass index (BMI). We found a positive association between BMI and EDI-2 scores for anorexia nervosa (AN) and eating disorder not otherwise specified (EDNOS), reflecting increasing ED symptomatology with increasing BMI. This association was not observed in bulimia nervosa (BN). We did not find a correlation between SF-36 scores and BMI in any of the diagnostic groups.
International Scholarly Research Notices | 2012
Alin Andries; Andreas Niemeier; René Klinkby Støving; Basem M. Abdallah; Anna-Maria Wolf; Kirsten Hørder; Moustapha Kassem
Objective. Recent data suggest that fetal antigen (FA1) is linked to disorders of body weight. Thus, we measured FA1 serum levels in two extreme nutritional states of morbid obesity (MO) and anorexia nervosa (AN) and monitored its response to weight changes. Design. FA1 and insulin serum concentrations were assessed in a cross-sectional study design at defined time points after gastric restrictive surgery for 25 MO patients and 15 women with AN. Results. Absolute FA1 serum levels were within the assay normal range and were not different between the groups at baseline. However, the ratio of FA1/BMI was significantly higher in AN. FA1 was inversely correlated with BMI before and after weight change in AN, but not in MO patients. In addition, MO patients displayed a significant concomitant decrease of FA1 and insulin with the first 25% of EWL, while in AN patients a significant increase of FA1 was observed in association with weight gain. Conclusion. FA1 is a sensitive indicator of metabolic adaptation during weight change. While FA1 serum levels in humans generally do not correlate with BMI, our results suggest that changes in FA1 serum levels reflect changes in adipose tissue turnover.