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Reboxetine in a patient with seasonal bulimia resistant to SSRIs and light therapy.

Abstract
There is a phenomenological similarity between seasonal affective disorder and bulimia nervosa, as sufferers from both show increased appetite and carbohydrate craving and probably share a common dysfunction in brain serotonergic systems. Serotonergic compounds and bright light therapy have proven to be an effective treatment for both disorders. We describe the case of a woman who suffered from seasonal affective disorder and nonpurging bulimia nervosa for 16 years and was resistant to treatment regimens with selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors and bright light therapy. She was successfully treated with the selective noradrenaline re-uptake inhibitor reboxetine. The authors want to encourage clinicians to make attempts to treat seasonal and non-seasonal bulimia with selective noradrenergic compounds.
AuthorsM Willeit Nicole Praschak-Rieder Eva Hilger Alexander Neumeister Siegfried Kasper
JournalInternational journal of psychiatry in clinical practice (Int J Psychiatry Clin Pract) Vol. 5 Issue 3 Pg. 207-9 ( 2001) ISSN: 1365-1501 [Print] England
PMID24926755 (Publication Type: Journal Article)

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