This condition arises from cheese-related trauma and it's often considered a subcategory of cibophobia. |
The pain pattern is so intimately related to the ingestion of food that the patient will reduce the size of meals, become reluctant to eat, and even develop frank cibophobia. |
Cibophobia differs from anorexia since appetite may persist but the pearson fears eating because of some associated or subsequent discomfort. |