Feeding
Disorders - More Than Picky Eating
Today’s Dietitian
By Kate Jackson
Vol. 6, No. 12, p. 24
It takes a multidisciplinary team to diagnose
and treat this often overlooked disorder in children who cannot
or will not eat.
In any household with an infant or small child,
mealtime can be a test of a parent’s patience. Spirited tykes
might throw their food, play with it, or spit it out. Spaghetti
may grace the walls, puddles of baby food pool on the floor, and
children may wear more meals than they actually eat. Despite these
theatrics, most children manage to get enough food in their stomachs
to nourish them and allow them to thrive.
When children with feeding disorders are in the
house, however, mealtime can be a test of parents’ endurance.
Children with such disorders—which Diane Barsky, MD, FAAP,
FACN, director of the Children’s Feeding Program at the Children’s
Hospital of Philadelphia, defines as those who consume nutrition
that is insufficient in quality or quantity based on their developmental
level—may refuse to eat entirely or eat inadequately to sustain
their weight and thrive.
As many as one in four children who are otherwise
normal display such behaviors while as many as 33% of children with
development disabilities, such as autism, experience feeding disorders.
It’s a problem that appears to be on the rise, perhaps paralleling
a rise in autism and pervasive developmental delay, Barsky indicates.
Among the consequences of feeding disorders are
overall macronutrient and calorie deficiencies, as well as more
subtle vitamin and mineral deficiencies. Afflicted children may
experience poor growth, frequent illness, long-term delayed development,
lack of endurance, poor wound healing, and fatigue. In the more
severe cases, infants and children are at risk for weight loss or
anorexia, malnutrition, and impaired brain development and cognitive
function.
Multiple Factors
Feeding disorders manifest themselves in various ways and generally
arise from a combination of factors. Some children clearly have
difficulty chewing or swallowing. Some don’t want to eat or
refuse to eat for no apparent reason and fuss and fight to demonstrate
displeasure or discomfort. Others do not defiantly refuse to eat,
nor do they exhibit irritability or apathy; they merely fail to
sustain or gain weight despite eating a normal amount of calories.
Some eat in normal amounts but select only age-inappropriate foods.
Children aged 3 or 4, for example, may still not
be chewing, so they only eat stage 2 baby food—which, says
Cara L. Cuddy, PhD, director of the Feeding Disorders Program at
the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, should be long in their past. Or,
she says, they may present with particular selectiveness—they’ll
eat only hard, crunchy foods such as crackers, potato chips, and
cookies, and nothing else.
While food aversions, table tantrums, and feeding
battles may be a normal part of development, when they persist or
are severe, there’s nothing normal about it. Picky eaters
may become less picky in time, and children who are simply acting
out their growing independence and control over their bodies will
likely settle down.
Children with feeding disorders, on the other hand,
will not simply grow out of them. Rather, they will continue to
suffer the consequences of inadequate nutrition and drive their
parents to distraction, if not outright panic. Presentation can
be highly variable. “We see kids who present with severe refusal
behaviors: turning the head, hitting the spoon, screaming, throwing
food, spitting, major tantrums, and intentional gagging,”
says Cuddy. “We have kids that can make themselves vomit at
will, so these aren’t the kids who don’t want to eat
green vegetables. These are the kids [who] don’t want to eat
anything.”
The root cause of most feeding disorders are medical
conditions that make it difficult or impossible for children to
eat normally. Eating may be uncomfortable at best or painful at
worst. The distress associated with this struggle often adds an
emotional layer to the problem with attendant behaviors that may
complicate, outlast, or even obscure the original problem. When
eating has been a struggle, the discomfort surrounding it lingers,
and children are likely to develop aversions or phobias to food
and the process of eating. Children may have developed conditioned
behaviors, such as gagging, vomiting, refusal to advance to age-appropriate
foods, and other negative impulses toward feeding. These negative
behaviors continue and often disrupt the family harmony and persist
long after underlying medical conditions have been treated and resolved.
In other cases, however, feeding disorders stem
from developmental or psychosocial problems that are independent
of any medical conditions. Furthermore, parents who are distraught
over their children’s feeding problems or those with food
issues of their own may behave in ways that perpetuate or worsen
negative food-related behaviors.
There’s often a combination of factors. Among
physiological conditions that may impair a child’s ability
to eat are chronic gastrointestinal issues, such as reflux, esophagitis,
motility or absorption difficulties, and blockages. Other contributing
conditions include postural problems and poor oro-motor skills.
The latter is frequently seen in children with cleft palates or
cerebral palsy, as well as in those who were premature infants and
who, in their first days of life, may have been intubated or fed
through tubes.
“We see many children with serious oro-motor
deficits—significant incoordination in the movements of the
oral muscles in the cheeks, the lips, the tongue, such that they
can’t effectively and efficiently move food in their mouths
to swallow, or to chew or to swallow, depending on the texture level,”
says Cuddy. Children with mental retardation, cystic fibrosis, food
allergies or intolerances, genetic and metabolic disorders, chronic
lung diseases, or congenital heart disease are also at risk.
Diagnosis and Treatment
A physical examination and laboratory and imaging studies are used
to rule out or diagnose such problems. The initial goal of treatment
is to correct any underlying illnesses, address vitamin and mineral
deficiencies, and ensure intake of an adequate amount of calories
and fluids. Next, it’s necessary to address through family
therapy the behaviors that have arisen in response to medical problems,
such as fear or loathing of the experience of eating.
On the other hand, it’s not always clear what’s
at the heart of the matter, and behavioral issues may give rise
to medical problems. “Sometimes we see children with undiagnosed
medical problems, and you don’t always know what came first,”
says Barsky. “Sometimes the medical condition comes first
and then the behaviors start to escalate.” In certain cases,
she says, these behaviors are classified as posttraumatic feeding
disorders. “The children have some kind of traumatic medical
event, and that’s made them shut down or avoid eating.”
To further complicate matters, parents’ attitudes
toward food, or their anxiety over their child’s failure to
grow at an expected rate, can itself cause a child’s eating
behaviors to escalate to a feeding problem, Barsky suggests. “For
example, a mother with a history of an eating problem or a focus
on food may have a 20-month child who suddenly starts being more
selective and will eat perhaps only pasta and one fruit or one vegetable,”
she explains. “The the mother may become anxious and start
force-feeding the child or using whatever tactic she can to persuade
the child to eat. The child then picks up on the stress and the
whole interaction becomes more stressful.”
Another situation in which a parent’s emotional
state may influence the development of feeding disorders sometimes
occurs in cases of postpartum depression when the mother is not
treated. Barsky says that when attachment disorders arise in these
cases or when children have been hospitalized and there are attachment
difficulties, there’s a higher risk of feeding problems.
Cuddy can recall only two or three children in the
nine years she’s been in the Cleveland Clinic program whose
conditions she believed were purely psychological. One child, she
remembers, was a typically developing healthy 3-year-old child who,
while riding in her car seat, swallowed and choked on a ring. The
parents pulled the car over and performed the Heimlich maneuver
and brought up the ring. The incident was traumatic for the whole
family, but the child seemed to rebound. Some days later, however,
she was eating a french fry and choked on it. She recovered herself,
but from that point on, she decided that she couldn’t eat.
Her mother managed to keep the child well-nourished by feeding her
the only thing she could keep down: a milkshake concoction including
Carnation Instant Breakfast, peanut butter, a banana, whole milk,
vanilla ice cream, and vitamin drops.
It was, says Cuddy, high in calories and very nutritious,
so the child grew beautifully. As a result, her pediatrician dragged
his feet on referring the child, telling the mother she’d
be fine and would eat when she’s ready. “She’s
growing, so don’t worry,” he told them. The child lived
on the milkshakes for a full year until the parents finally pressed
the doctor for another solution. Ultimately, they were referred
to the Cleveland Clinic program where the team got their child back
on a regular eating pattern.
Missed Diagnosis
Parents at their wit’s end may—if they’re lucky—find
their way to an interdisciplinary feeding disorders treatment program
where a team approach addresses both the medical and emotional impediments
to eating. Frequently, however, feeding disorders are dismissed
both by parents and healthcare providers as normal rites of passage
for children—as stages they’ll pass through unscathed.
Experts in the treatment of feeding disorders, however, suggest
that too many children with feeding disorders are labeled as picky
eaters when in fact they suffer from treatable problems.
Barsky and Cuddy agree that feeding disorders frequently
go undiagnosed and their symptoms trivialized, even by pediatricians.
The typical age of presentation to the Cleveland Clinic program
is 33 months, and most of the children have already had some other
attempt at treatment in the community that hasn’t worked,
says Cuddy. “In many instances, our families have been struggling
with feedings since their kids were less than 1 year old.”
“There’s not enough concern sometimes
on the part of healthcare professionals,” says Barsky. “They’ll
say it’s just a phase or that the child is just a typically
picky 2-year-old.” Worse, they don’t always identify
the kind of nutritional problems for which these children are at
risk. It’s a lack of awareness, she says, but also a lack
of nutrition education in general.
Pediatricians, Barsky says, need to listen more
carefully to parents to tease out age-typical food jags from food
selectivity that puts children at nutritional risk. It’s especially
likely to be overlooked in children with developmental problems,
observes Cuddy. “It’s missed in general because pediatricians
are trained to recognize illness, and so they miss some of the subtle
developmental issues, especially early on, when they think the mother
is just being anxious and overprotective.”
It’s not that physicians don’t care,
she suggests, but that managed care has deteriorated the patient-provider
relationship to the point where there’s little more than a
10-minute visit, so when the children are at at an appropriate weight
and growing sufficiently, the problem tends not to be taken seriously.
Even when pediatricians recognize the problem, notes Cuddy, there
are only a handful of multidisciplinary programs, so physicians
often lack resources with which to help the children.
Multidisciplinary Treatment Teams
Ideally, a child with a feeding disorder will be treated comprehensively
with an integrative approach by a multidisciplinary team of providers,
including a medical doctor, a nurse, a psychologist, occupational
and speech therapists, a dietitian, and, perhaps, a gastroenterologist,
as at the Children’s Feeding Program. The initial goal of
treatment is to correct any underlying illnesses, address vitamin
and mineral deficiencies, and ensure the adequate amount of calories
and sufficient and appropriate fluids.
In as many as 50% of cases, tube feedings are necessary
to ensure complete nutrition, and weaning children from such feedings
is a goal of treatment. At the same time, it’s necessary to
address through family therapy the behaviors that have arisen in
response to these illnesses and their impact on eating. Barsky points
out that feeding disorders are often the presenting symptoms of
overall developmental problems, so it’s also important to
ensure that the child’s overall development is normal.
At the Cleveland Clinic Children’s Hospital
for Rehabilitation, patients with feeding disorders of varying degrees
are treated by such a team through individual outpatient therapy
and treatment sessions or, for the most severe cases, through the
Robert O. Walton Day Hospital. The initial assessment, explains
Cuddy, is a two- to three-hour marathon that starts with the team
physician, a developmental pediatrician who does a history and physical
and then meets with and briefs the rest of the team. If a medical
problem is indicated, further testing is ordered and the problem
is treated. The team members then meet with the caregivers while
the child is present and perform an extensive interview to extract
a developmental and feeding history.
When children are old enough, they’re included
when it is developmentally appropriate. The child and caregivers
are then put in a treatment room with a one-way mirror. The caregivers
are given a tray with a variety of foods and textures and are instructed
to do whatever they would do at home. The rest of the team, on the
other side of the mirror, observes the meal, discusses impressions,
and then meets with the caregivers and gives feedback and recommendations.
Depending on the child’s particular needs, the team members
provide therapy and counseling, generally over a course of two years.
Dietitian’s Role
At the Cleveland Clinic program, Maureen Andrewson, RD, LD, focuses
on optimizing the children’s nutritional status and integrating
nutrition plans on a holistic level. At the initial intake, she
assesses the patient’s weight, height, and placement on growth
percentiles and begins to plan a goal for the patient. Throughout
treatment, she assesses the children and plans their nutritional
care with an eye on moving them toward an age-appropriate volume
and variety of food and a reduction in the dependence on enteral
or supplemental feeding. Equally important, she observes the children
globally and assesses the parent dynamic and how it affects the
situation. She gets a clear picture of the family’s routines
and habits and develops a consistent schedule—a step she sees
as crucial to good outcomes—and demands from the family a
commitment to the consistent enforcement of that schedule. “Agreeing
to a consistent care plan and following through with a systematic
program of modest changes is the basis of my nutritional assessment
and treatment,” she says.
Career Opportunity
Andrewson highly recommends feeding disorders as a specialty area
for RDs and notes the likelihood of an increased demand for such
expertise. She sees the rise of childhood food allergies as a factor
fueling the demand for feeding disorder treatment and highlighting
the special talents of the nutritional professional.
The field demands specialized skills and a love
of children, but the rewards, she says, are incalculable. In the
community, RDs are on the front line of detecting feeding disorders,
providing nutritional guidance, and referring parents to appropriate
resources. And in interdisciplinary programs, she says, the RD brings
to the table a broad knowledge base that is well-valued in these
specialized teams.
— Kate Jackson is a staff writer for Today’s
Dietitian.
Teamwork Matters
Parents of patients with feeding disorders are often referred to
dietitians, who can be helpful in a wide variety of ways. Still,
in most cases, additional expertise is needed to comprehensively
manage children with feeding disorders.
For example, explains Diane Barsky, director of
the Children’s Feeding Program at the Children’s Hospital
of Philadelphia, while a dietitian may be able to tell parents how
to feed their children for maximum impact, if the child has significant
refusal behaviors or is an extremely picky eater, the parent won’t
be able to get the nutrition into the child to promote weight gain.
It’s important, she says, to identify extremely selective
children and, in the absence of a local feeding disorders program,
refer them to behavioral psychologists, who can help address the
behaviors.
Similarly, she says, when patients have sensory
and oro-motor issues, dietitians can help by referring the patients
to pediatric personnel or therapists who can address their special
needs. Dietitians should recognize that they need to work in conjunction
with other therapists and if they don’t have a team with which
to work, they should have expert resources with whom they can collaborate.
Maureen Andrewson, RD, LD, of the Cleveland Clinic,
agrees. “Many dietitians struggle in the community with problems
that really go out of the range of what RDs normally do, such as
monitoring weight and caloric intake and supplement planning.”
She feels lucky to be part of a disciplinary team but cautions other
RDs in less supportive settings not to try to shoulder the burden
of complete treatment, but rather to turn to speech and occupational
therapists and behavioral psychologists in the community who are
trained to treat children with feeding disorders.
— KJ
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