# Fear, Feeding, and the Gut: Nutrition Support Considerations in Adults with ARFID and Gastrointestinal Symptoms

**Authors:** Jamie Bering, John K. DiBaise

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/nu18050726 · Nutrients · 2026-02-24

## TL;DR

This paper discusses how ARFID, an eating disorder, interacts with gastrointestinal issues in adults and highlights the need for better nutritional support strategies.

## Contribution

The paper provides a narrative review on ARFID in adults with GI disorders, emphasizing the need for multidisciplinary care and further research.

## Key findings

- ARFID and GI disorders have a bidirectional relationship, with fear of GI symptoms driving restrictive eating.
- Nutrition support therapies in ARFID are under-researched in adults, with limited evidence for enteral or parenteral nutrition.
- Expert guidelines caution against routine invasive nutrition support due to risks of reinforcing food avoidance.

## Abstract

Avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) is an eating disorder characterized by persistent restriction or avoidance of food intake leading to clinically significant nutritional, medical, and/or psychosocial consequences, without associated body-image disturbance. Although historically described in pediatric populations, ARFID is increasingly recognized in adults, particularly among patients with gastrointestinal (GI) disorders. Emerging data demonstrate a strong bidirectional relationship between ARFID and GI disease—especially disorders of gut–brain interaction—where fear of GI symptoms commonly drives restrictive eating, and chronic undernutrition may worsen GI motility, visceral sensitivity, and symptom severity, reinforcing a self-perpetuating cycle. Despite growing recognition of ARFID in adult gastroenterology patients, evidence guiding nutritional management and the use of nutrition support therapies in this population remains limited. This narrative review synthesizes the current literature on the epidemiology, clinical features, and nutritional consequences of ARFID in adults with GI disease, with a focus on screening and diagnostic considerations relevant to GI clinicians and principles of multidisciplinary management. Particular attention is given to the role of nutrition support therapies, including oral nutritional supplementation, enteral nutrition, and parenteral nutrition. While oral strategies are foundational to nutritional rehabilitation, available evidence supporting enteral or parenteral nutrition in adults with ARFID is sparse and largely extrapolated from pediatric or retrospective studies. Expert guidelines caution against routine or prolonged use of invasive nutrition support due to risks of reinforcing food avoidance, medical complications, and poor long-term outcomes, recommending their use only in carefully selected, medically necessary, and time-limited circumstances. Overall, ARFID represents an underrecognized but clinically significant contributor to malnutrition and symptom burden in adult patients with GI disorders, underscoring the need for routine screening, individualized multidisciplinary care, and high-quality prospective research to inform evidence-based treatment guidelines.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (MONDO:7770002)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** eating disorder (MESH:D001068), ARFID (MESH:D000080146), Symptoms (MESH:D012816), body-image disturbance (MESH:D057215), GI disease (MESH:D005767), malnutrition (MESH:D044342)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

61 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12987045/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12987045