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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2020 Jan 12.
Published in final edited form as: Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2019 Jan 12;21(1):1. doi: 10.1007/s11920-019-0988-1

Table 1.

Summary of sex differences (how males differ from females) in eating disorders

Domain Documented Differences and Similarities
Signs & Symptoms •  Males are more likely to present with ARFID or sub-threshold BED
•  Mortality rates comprable between sexes
•  Males engage in high rates of physical activity as compensatory method
•  Females demonstrate increased drive for thiness, while males have increased concern with muscularity and shape
•  Males are more likely to have a history of higher weight prior to ED onset
•  Males may have fewer psychiatric co-morbidities
•  Levels of distress are comprable between sexes
•  Males with comorbidities are at greater risk for suicide attempts
Genetics •  Genetic influence on risk for males is constant (50%); whereas female risk jumps from 0% to 50% at puberty
Sex Hormones •  Testosterone exposure during prenatal development may protect against risk for the development of eating disorders
•  Testosterone may be a protective factor for males vis a vis binge eating
Neurocogntive Differences •  Common areas of study in adults include central coherence and set-shifting
•  Rarely examined in adolescence, sample sizes are small and generalizaations cannot be made regarding sex differences
Reward Circuitry •  No research examining sex differences in EDs