The main causes of food disorders include:
1. Vital causes:
Such as the disorder of the environment and training and some resort to dieting to lose weight in the case of obesity, and physical diseases such as diseases of the mouth, teeth and digestive system.
2 - psychological reasons:
Such as generalized emotional disorder, severe emotional deprivation and insecurity, lack of leisure time, lack of sports, continuous low-intensity work, desire for death (as in depression), fear of poisoning (as in illness), fear of pollution Obsession and oppression).
3. Environmental causes:
Such as the mother's refusal to breastfeed, sudden and delayed weaning, disturbed mother-infant relationship, maternal anxiety about baby food, erroneous eating habits (such as eating sweets always between meals too much) and eating disorders such as fights between adults and children Eating is accompanied by painful experiences such as reprimand, stress and violence. Food disturbance can sometimes be due to the intake of fatty substances that need to be digested for a long time, or to eat a very sweet substance before eating, irregular meal schedules or lack of certain vitamins or otherwise.
4. Pathological causes:
Such as constipation, dyspepsia, concomitant symptoms such as vomiting, tongue-clotting, the possibility of a suspected tubercle, or sources of toxins (toxin: harmful secretions secreted by chronic infections such as chronic tonsillitis and gingivitis). All organs of the patient's body including the digestive system.
1. Vital causes:
Such as the disorder of the environment and training and some resort to dieting to lose weight in the case of obesity, and physical diseases such as diseases of the mouth, teeth and digestive system.
2 - psychological reasons:
Such as generalized emotional disorder, severe emotional deprivation and insecurity, lack of leisure time, lack of sports, continuous low-intensity work, desire for death (as in depression), fear of poisoning (as in illness), fear of pollution Obsession and oppression).
3. Environmental causes:
Such as the mother's refusal to breastfeed, sudden and delayed weaning, disturbed mother-infant relationship, maternal anxiety about baby food, erroneous eating habits (such as eating sweets always between meals too much) and eating disorders such as fights between adults and children Eating is accompanied by painful experiences such as reprimand, stress and violence. Food disturbance can sometimes be due to the intake of fatty substances that need to be digested for a long time, or to eat a very sweet substance before eating, irregular meal schedules or lack of certain vitamins or otherwise.
4. Pathological causes:
Such as constipation, dyspepsia, concomitant symptoms such as vomiting, tongue-clotting, the possibility of a suspected tubercle, or sources of toxins (toxin: harmful secretions secreted by chronic infections such as chronic tonsillitis and gingivitis). All organs of the patient's body including the digestive system.