I'm sorry, but WikiAnswers is meant to be a place where questions are answered that are there to help or educate or assist a person. Suggesting a method of weight loss(of burning fat) through encouraging anorexia (a potentially fatal and life-endangering disease) would not be helping, but would be promoting this dangerous life style.
Nope! Sorry for the short answer, but that's all I have to say-- no.
It can take months for the average anorexic to experience the consequences of organ malfunction or failure. For those with serious conditions, it can happen within weeks, though.
Not long, and not well: they need medical and psychiatric help immediately.
about 20 to 35 min is ok.
How long you can be a purely restrictive anorexic without binging or dying depends entirely on the person, their intake, vital signs, medical history etc etc
when you dont eat for so long, your metabolism slows down. so when you do start eating again, your metabolism will still be running slow, so barely burning anything you ate, your body also will try to store everything you eat as fat, thinking you might go back into starving mode.
The amount of time would depend on how fast the barn is burning, where the fire is located, and how long it has been burning. That being said it is always best to get a horse out of a burning barn as fast as possible.
yes they can still have a period, but not for long, if the anorexia goes untreated.
yes you sure can
It may take too long. The body will go into 'starvation mode' where it will hold onto all of the body's fat that it can and the person may die before they see 'anorexic looking' weight loss. The stomach then gets bloated and the person will look very pregnant. The the body will start digesting the muscles, then the intestines, which will kill you if your heart doesn't fail you first. It's not worth it. Lose the weight the way you gained it, gradually.
It is not something achievable that you can measure by time, it is not a goal or a benchmark, it is a mental illness.
For a long time it was rumored that she had an eating disorder of some kind, but it was never confirmed.