# Volume addiction: introducing a novel phenotype within compulsive high volume eating

**Authors:** Vera I. Tarman

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1760037 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

The paper introduces 'volume addiction' as a new type of disordered eating focused on consuming large amounts of food or fluids to feel full, not just on high-calorie foods.

## Contribution

It proposes 'volume addiction' as a novel subtype of compulsive high-volume eating, distinct from existing eating disorder classifications.

## Key findings

- Individuals with eating disorders consume greater volumes before feeling full and show abnormal gastric activity.
- Gastric stretch receptors and gut hormones influence satiety and feeding behavior through reward circuits.
- Neuroimaging shows altered brain responses to food volume, suggesting volume itself is a meaningful dimension in eating disorders.

## Abstract

Most accounts of disordered eating and food addiction focus on hedonic, calorie-dense intake. However, many patients describe an urgent drive to feel profoundly full, sometimes achieved through enormous volumes of low-calorie foods or fluids. This presentation centers on amount rather than food type, and differs from binge eating disorder's 2-h consumption criterion. Current diagnostic systems (DSM, ICD) do not recognize this volume-seeking presentation, and scientific literature rarely treats gastric volume as a primary reinforcer. Water-load studies show individuals with bulimia nervosa and binge-eating disorder consume substantially greater volumes before reporting satiation and display abnormal gastric myoelectrical activity compared to controls. Animal studies demonstrate that gastric stretch receptors and vagal responses are plastic and can alter satiety and intake. Gut hormones, such as ghrelin, leptin, insulin, and GLP-1s, and their interactions with reward circuitry link visceral signals to feeding behavior. Neuroimaging studies reveal altered reward responses to food cues and volume. Together, these findings suggest volume itself is a meaningful, measurable dimension warranting clinical and scientific attention. This article synthesizes these strands to propose compulsive high-volume eating (CHVE) as a distinct construct, defined by recurrent, distressing episodes where gastric distension serves as the central motivator. Within CHVE, I propose a “volume-addiction” subtype characterized by craving, tolerance, and loss of control focused on fullness. While current evidence is indirect, sufficient data exists to justify identification and study of this phenotype to target research and develop more effective treatments for food-addicted individuals who struggle specifically with volume intake.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** ghrelin (PubChem CID 16133832), leptin (PubChem CID 157010069), insulin (PubChem CID 70678557)
- **Diseases:** bulimia nervosa (MONDO:0005452), binge-eating disorder (MONDO:0005582)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** LEP (leptin) [NCBI Gene 3952] {aka LEPD, OB, OBS}, INS (insulin) [NCBI Gene 3630] {aka IDDM, IDDM1, IDDM2, ILPR, IRDN, MODY10}
- **Diseases:** gastric distension (MESH:D013272), binge eating disorder (MESH:D056912), craving (MESH:C564883), CHVE (MESH:D000073932), Volume addiction (MESH:D019966), bulimia nervosa (MESH:D052018), disordered eating (MESH:D001068)
- **Chemicals:** Gut hormones (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

31 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12833246/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12833246