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Caso · trastornos-alimentarios·Etapa 12-18Evidencia alta

Sospecha de trastorno alimentario en la adolescencia

Los trastornos alimentarios son enfermedades mentales graves con alta morbi- mortalidad; la detección temprana y el tratamiento basado en evidencia (FBT/ Maudsley para anorexia adolescente) cambian el pronóstico. La familia es parte del tratamiento, no la causa.

mental-healthfamily

Contexto

Anorexia nerviosa, bulimia, trastorno por atracón y ARFID son cuadros con componente biológico, psicológico y sociocultural. La pubertad y la presión estética (ahora amplificada por redes con contenido pro-ana / 'cuerpos inalcanzables') aumentan vulnerabilidad. La anorexia tiene una de las tasas de mortalidad más altas entre trastornos psiquiátricos. Family-Based Treatment (Maudsley) tiene mejor evidencia que terapia individual para anorexia adolescente: la familia recupera el rol de re-alimentar bajo guía clínica, y luego se devuelve la autonomía progresivamente.

Lo que dice la evidencia

  1. [claim-fbt-anorexia]mental-healthEvidencia alta

    Family-Based Treatment (Maudsley) is the first-line evidence-based intervention for adolescent anorexia nervosa, outperforming individual therapy on full remission at follow-up.

    FBT (Maudsley) es primera línea basada en evidencia para anorexia adolescente; supera terapia individual en remisión a largo plazo.

    Matices: Family availability and clinician training are required.

  2. [claim-early-puberty-girls-risk]physical-developmentEvidencia alta

    Early pubertal timing — particularly in girls — is associated with elevated risk for depression, anxiety, and externalizing problems in adolescence.

    Pubertad temprana eleva riesgo de internalización, incluyendo TCA.

    Matices: Effects depend on social context and prior vulnerabilities.

  3. [claim-social-media-mixed]screen-timeEvidencia mixta

    Average associations between adolescent social-media use and well-being are small; effects appear larger for vulnerable youth and during specific developmental windows, and causal claims for population-level harm remain contested.

    Subgrupos vulnerables con exposición a contenido pro-ana o de comparación corporal pueden tener mayor riesgo.

    Matices: Heavy use, passive use, and cyber-victimization carry larger risks; girls in early adolescence may be more sensitive.

  4. [claim-authoritative-adolescents]parenting-stylesEvidencia alta

    Authoritative parenting (warmth, structure, autonomy support) predicts better academic, social, and mental-health outcomes across adolescence and across cultures.

    Calidez + estructura facilita adherencia al tratamiento, que es exigente.

    Matices: Effects vary somewhat by cultural meaning of strictness; class and context matter.

  5. [claim-psych-control-harm]parenting-stylesEvidencia alta

    Parental psychological control (guilt induction, love withdrawal, intrusive emotion regulation) is consistently associated with adolescent internalizing problems, in contrast to behavioral control which protects against externalizing.

    Crítica corporal, comentarios sobre peso o dietas en familia eleva riesgo.

    Matices: Cultural variation in how psychological control is perceived.

Qué hacer

Qué evitar

Señales de alarma

Consulta con un profesional si:

CUALQUIERA de estos signos requiere evaluación médica y de salud mental especializada. Bradicardia severa, deshidratación, hipotensión ortostática, alteraciones electrolíticas o caída de peso rápida pueden requerir hospitalización para estabilización. Los TCA son enfermedades graves y tratables; la rapidez importa. Esta ficha NO sustituye atención clínica.

¿Tu situación es distinta?

Genera una respuesta personalizada con tu caso concreto. Mismo rigor, redactada para tu contexto.

Fuentes

13 referencias

  1. [1] Haidt, J. (2024). The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness · Penguin Press
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  2. [2] Orben, A. et al. (2024). Windows of developmental sensitivity to social media · Nature Communications, 13, 1649
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  3. [3] U.S. Office of the Surgeon General (2023). Social Media and Youth Mental Health: The U.S. Surgeon General's Advisory · U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
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  4. [4] Hornberger, L. L., Lane, M. A., AAP Committee on Adolescence (2021). Identification and management of eating disorders in children and adolescents · Pediatrics, 147(1), e2020040279
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  5. [5] Odgers, C. L., Jensen, M. R. (2020). Annual Research Review: Adolescent mental health in the digital age — facts, fears, and future directions · Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 61(3), 336-348
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  6. [6] Orben, A., Przybylski, A. K. (2019). The association between adolescent well-being and digital technology use · Nature Human Behaviour, 3(2), 173-182
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  7. [7] Twenge, J. M. et al. (2018). Increases in depressive symptoms, suicide-related outcomes, and suicide rates among U.S. adolescents after 2010 and links to increased new media screen time · Clinical Psychological Science, 6(1), 3-17
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  8. [8] Mendle, J. (2014). Why puberty matters for psychopathology · Child Development Perspectives, 8(4), 218-222
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  9. [9] Lock, J., Le Grange, D. (2013). Treatment Manual for Anorexia Nervosa: A Family-Based Approach (2nd ed.) · Guilford Press
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  10. [10] Negriff, S., Susman, E. J. (2011). Pubertal timing, depression, and externalizing problems: A framework, review, and examination of gender differences · Journal of Research on Adolescence, 21(3), 717-746
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  11. [11] Lock, J. et al. (2010). Randomized clinical trial comparing family-based treatment with adolescent-focused individual therapy for adolescents with anorexia nervosa · Archives of General Psychiatry, 67(10), 1025-1032
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  12. [12] Steinberg, L. (2001). We know some things: Parent-adolescent relationships in retrospect and prospect · Journal of Research on Adolescence, 11(1), 1-19
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  13. [13] Barber, B. K. (1996). Parental psychological control: Revisiting a neglected construct · Child Development, 67(6), 3296-3319
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