Wednesday, May 21, 2025

What’s the difference between binge eating and bulimia? Are their treatments similar? (ChatGPT, 2025-5-21)

 Binge Eating Disorder (BED) and Bulimia Nervosa (BN) share some overlapping features—most notably, episodes of binge eating—but they differ in crucial ways that affect both diagnosis and treatment.





1. 

Core Differences

Feature

Binge Eating Disorder (BED)

Bulimia Nervosa (BN)

Binge episodes

Yes

Yes

Loss of control

Yes

Yes

Compensatory behaviors

Absent

Present (vomiting, laxatives, fasting, etc.)

Body image disturbance

May be present, but not required

Central to diagnosis

Weight

Often overweight or obese

Often within normal weight or slightly underweight

Shame/guilt

Common

Common





2. 

Psychological Profile



  • Bulimia is more commonly associated with:
    • Impulsivity
    • Perfectionism
    • Greater body image dissatisfaction
    • Risk of substance use or self-harm

  • BED may involve:
    • Emotional eating
    • Shame and avoidance of eating in public
    • Less overt body image pathology






3. 

Treatment Approaches: Similarities and Differences




Shared First-Line Treatment: Psychotherapy



  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy – Enhanced (CBT-E) is first-line for both
    • Targets the binge-purge cycle in BN
    • Targets emotional eating and loss of control in BED




Other Psychotherapies



  • Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT): helpful for emotion dysregulation, especially in BN
  • Interpersonal Therapy (IPT): evidence-based for both
  • Mindfulness-based therapy: promising for BED






4. 

Pharmacological Treatments

Medication Class

Bulimia Nervosa

Binge Eating Disorder

SSRIs (esp. fluoxetine)

FDA-approved (Fluoxetine 60 mg/day)

Sometimes used off-label

Topiramate

Reduces binge and purge episodes

Effective, but side effects common

Lisdexamfetamine (Vyvanse)

Not approved

FDA-approved for BED

Other stimulants

Not used

Sometimes used off-label





5. 

Nutritional and Medical Interventions



  • Both require:
    • Nutritional counseling and food normalization
    • Monitoring of electrolytes, especially in BN due to purging
    • Treatment of comorbid conditions (depression, anxiety, etc.)






Summary:



  • BED = bingeing without purging.
  • BN = bingeing with compensatory behaviors and often stronger body image concerns.
  • Treatments overlap in psychotherapy, but medications diverge—e.g., fluoxetine for BN vs Vyvanse for BED.



Would you like a PDF summary table of this comparison, or a flowchart of treatment pathways?