Anorexia is an eating disorder. People with anorexics severly limit their food intake to well below what normal, heathy levels and recommendations are.
I'm not quite sure what you're asking...? Anorexia and/or bulimia can cause an 'unbalanced diet' and lack of nutrients to the body, but you do not simply 'get' and eating disorder from and unbalanced diet. An eating disorder is not just 'not eating' or other eating disorder behaviors, but much more extensive, involving mental and emotional patterns as well as the eating habits. (Or lack thereof. Ha.)
Their is not a difference between the two things. Anorexia Nervosa is the name of the actual eating disorder. The other eating disorder is Bulimia Nervosa, and it is different from Anorexia Nervosa.
Not in and of itself, but personality or other mental problems can add in to case eating disroders like anorexia.
Pica is an eating disorder that makes a person crave nonfood items such as staples our other dangerous objects.
A squids eating habit is eating fish and other type things
a frogs eating habits is the food the frog eats like worms insects and other food
There is no definitie genetic link that confirms that anorexia is inherited. There are theories that it could be an inherited trait. Other theories propose that a likelihood may be inherited (that is, a person may be more likely than someone else to develop an eating disorder based on a predisposition to other factor-causes like depression or BDD). Many medical professionals believe that it is a "learned" behaviour. That is, people with family members who suffer from anorexia may themselves develop anorexia not because of genetics but because they copy habits or actions of family members.
Walking pneumonia and anorexia are not directly related, but they can intersect in some cases. Walking pneumonia, a mild form of pneumonia, can cause symptoms like fatigue and loss of appetite, which may lead to reduced food intake. Anorexia, on the other hand, is an eating disorder characterized by an intense fear of gaining weight, leading to self-imposed starvation. While one can exacerbate the symptoms of the other, they are fundamentally different conditions.
Eating disorders aren't genetic. But, if you do have a family member who has or had an eating disorder, it is more likely that you will develop their habits later on in life. This doesn't mean you will automatically have an eating disorder, it just means that because you are used to their way of eating, it may be thought of as "the norm" so you might pick up on it more.
It is considered that anorexia can sometimes have a genetic link. If a person (particularly a girl) has a diret biological family member, then it is possible that they might have a slightly higher risk of developing anorexia or other eating disorders.
Osteoporosis is irreversible in people with anorexia. Other health conditions resulting from anorexia are generally reversible.
The common "itch" or desire to scratch oneself (Latin:pruritus) happens to every living animal. It is not specifically caused or triggerred by anorexia or any other eating disorder.