Abstract
Twenty-three women with nonpurging bulimia underwent a 12-week,double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of desipramine hydrochloride. Repeated standardized rating scales, mood assessments, the self-reports of dietary habits were used to measure changes in binge frequency and cognitive processes associated with food intake. The women who recevied desipramine reduced their frequency of binge eating by 63%, but women receiving placebo increased their frequency of binge eating by 16%. Twelve weeks after initiating treatment, 60% of the treatment group but only 15% of the placebo group abstained from binge eating. The women who received desipramine showed significantly more dietary restraint and reported significantly less hunger, suggesting that desipramine acts to suppress appetite. These preliminary findings suggest that the therapeutic effects of desipramine established in the treatment of purging bulimia nervosa extend to patients with nonpurging bulimia.