Polyphagia

Polyphagia is excessive food consumption, reaching the point of gluttony.

With polyphagia, a person experiences a constant feeling of hunger and can eat very large portions of food. This behavior can lead to obesity and other health problems.

Among the causes of polyphagia are:

  1. Disturbances in the functioning of hormones, in particular insulin or leptin. This is often observed in diabetes mellitus.

  2. Psychological problems - depression, anxiety, stress. Food is used as a form of comfort.

  3. Disturbances in the functioning of the hypothalamus, the part of the brain that regulates appetite.

  4. Taking certain medications, such as glucocorticoids.

  5. Rare diseases such as pituitary tumor.

Treatment for polyphagia depends on the cause. Medicines, psychotherapy, lifestyle changes and diet may be used. It is important to identify and eliminate factors that provoke excessive appetite as early as possible.



Polyphagia (from the ancient Greek words polys - "many" and phagein - "to eat") is a condition characterized by excessive food consumption and overeating.

With polyphagia, a person experiences a constant feeling of hunger and can eat large portions of food at one time. Such gluttony is usually not associated with enjoying the taste of food. People with polyphagia eat quickly without feeling full even after eating too much food.

Polyphagia can be a symptom of various diseases and conditions:

  1. Diabetes mellitus (especially type 1) - excess glucose in the blood disrupts satiety signals in the brain.

  2. Damage to the hypothalamus, the part of the brain that regulates appetite.

  3. Depression and anxiety disorders.

  4. Bulimia is an eating disorder.

  5. Side effect of some medications.

  6. Hyperthyroidism and other hormonal disorders.

To diagnose polyphagia, an examination by an endocrinologist and neurologist is necessary to identify and treat the underlying disease. It is also important to consult a psychotherapist if psychogenic causes are suspected. Treatment is usually comprehensive, including drug therapy, normalization of nutrition, and behavioral correction. With timely treatment, the prognosis is favorable.



Polyphagia: when gluttony becomes a disease Gluttony and excesses The modern lifestyle, focused on career development and the realization of personal potential, gives rise to new behavioral models. The value of spiritual development is decreasing, and a high level of self-satisfaction is associated with material benefits - for example, expensive travel, major acquisitions and active recreation. Of course, active work and the desire for success bring positive results, but it is worth thinking about the consequences: excessive focus on the goal can lead to an overload of various substances in the body, which causes various diseases. Prolonged stress loads, chronic worries, overload at work undermine health - the body cannot cope with the stress, exhaustion occurs, and energy resources are wasted. Simply put, the digestive system suffers: the functioning of the stomach and intestines is disrupted, problems with metabolism arise, the rhythm of sleep and wakefulness is disrupted, diseases of the digestive system, metabolism, cardiovascular and nervous systems arise, and harmony disappears in the human body. In our quest to achieve success, we must not forget about health, as well as its characteristics that are different from a healthy person. To maintain a healthy balance between spiritual and material growth, harmony in the development of each of these components is necessary - “physical balance”. To be healthy means to be happy. A healthy lifestyle is more than the absence of bad habits. This is integrity and harmony of body, mind and spirit.

**Polyphagists** Such a property as polyphagia is usually called *excess food consumption*, in which a person consumes more different foods without thinking about how beneficial they are for his body. It happens that a person does not eat at all, but at the same time he has no health problems, he feels good and does not lose an ounce of weight. However, if the whole family eats well and adds something extra every time, be it meat, fish or vegetables, this is already overeating. And this condition can have a rather negative impact on overall health, leading to obesity, gastritis and stomach ulcers. It is this kind of addiction that is dangerous to health, and can even lead to complete clinical death if this continues for a long time. You need to understand that addiction arises easily, and is also dangerous because it reaches the final stage, when, looking at life, a person thinks, “I’m dead and I’m screwed.” When a person comes to restaurants