Sex differences in electrolyte abnormalities indicating refeeding syndrome risk among hospitalized adolescents and young adults with eating disorders
Jason M. Nagata, Anthony Nguyen, Ruben Vargas, Amanda E. Downey, Anita V. Chaphekar, Kyle T. Ganson, Sara M. Buckelew, Andrea K. Garber

TL;DR
This study found no significant sex differences in electrolyte abnormalities indicating refeeding syndrome risk among hospitalized adolescents and young adults with eating disorders.
Contribution
The study is the first to compare sex differences in electrolyte abnormalities indicating refeeding syndrome risk in this patient population.
Findings
Rates of hypophosphatemia, hypokalemia, and hypomagnesemia were low and did not significantly differ between males and females.
Older age and lower BMI at admission were associated with higher odds of refeeding hypophosphatemia and hypomagnesemia.
Males required more calories and had longer hospital stays, but did not have higher refeeding syndrome risk.
Abstract
Refeeding syndrome is the gravest possible medical complication in malnourished patients undergoing refeeding in the hospital. We previously reported that males with malnutrition secondary to eating disorders required more calories and had longer hospital stays than females; however, sex differences in electrolyte abnormalities indicating refeeding syndrome risk remain unknown. The objective of this study was to assess differences in electrolyte abnormalities indicating refeeding syndrome risk among male and female adolescents and young adults with eating disorders hospitalized for medical instability. We retrospectively reviewed the electronic medical records of 558 patients aged 9–25 years admitted to the University of California, San Francisco Eating Disorders Program for medical instability between May 2012 and August 2020. Serum was drawn per standard of care between 5 and 7 am…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEating Disorders and Behaviors · Child Nutrition and Feeding Issues · Electrolyte and hormonal disorders
