| Literature DB >> 28902163 |
Abstract
Sodium is an essential nutrient for the human body. It is widely used as sodium chloride (table salt) in (processed) foods and overconsumed by both children and adults, placing them at risk for adverse health effects such as high blood pressure and cardiovascular diseases. The current review focusses on the development of salt taste sensitivity and preferences, and its association with food intake. Three -to- four month old infants are able to detect and prefer sodium chloride solutions over plain water, which is thought to be a biological unlearned response. Liking for water with sodium chloride mostly decreases when infants enter early childhood, but liking for sodium chloride in appropriate food contexts such as soup and snack foods remains high. The increased acceptance and preference of sodium chloride rich foods coincides with infants' exposure to salty foods, and is therefore thought to be mostly a learned response. Children prefer higher salt concentrations than adults, but seem to be equally sensitive to salt taste. The addition of salt to foods increases children's consumption of those foods. However, children's liking for salt taste as such does not seem to correlate with children's consumption of salty foods. Decreasing the exposure to salty tasting foods during early infancy is recommended. Salt plays an important role in children's liking for a variety of foods. It is, however, questionable if children's liking for salt per se influences the intake of salty foods.Entities:
Keywords: children; development; foods; intake; nutrition; salt; sensory; smell; taste
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28902163 PMCID: PMC5622771 DOI: 10.3390/nu9091011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Infants’ (0–6 months) Indifference, acceptance and rejection responses to different concentrations of NaCl water (%NaCl w/v). Age on the y-axis represent mean age in months. 1 Maller & Desor 1973, measure: intake, stimuli: salt water [40]; 2 Beauchamp,Cowart &Moran 1986, measure: intake, stimuli: salt water [49]; 3 Harris & Booth 1987, measure: intake, stimuli: cereals [50]; 4 Rossenstein &Oster, 1988, measure facial expression and sucking, stimuli: water [37]; 5 Crystal & Bernstein, 1998, measure: facial expression, intake, stimuli: salt water [51]; 6 Beauchamp, Cowart, Mennella, Marsh 1994, measure: sucks and intake, stimuli: salt water [43]; 7 Stein, Cowart & Beauchamp, 2006. measure: intake, stimuli: salt water [52]; 8 Stein, Cowart & Beauchamp, 2012, measure: intake, stimuli: salt water [53].
Children’s salt taste detection and recognition threshold.
| Population | Type of Threshold (Design) | Solution Range %NaCl in Water | Threshold | Remarks | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Detection (filter paper, paired comparison) | 0.6–1.6 | 0.6% | 0.6%NaCl was lowest concentration presented. | Thresholds not related to liking or salt intake | Matsuzuki et al., 2008 [ | |
| Detection (staircase, one in 4) | 0.004–0.58 | 0.04% | Mean based on interpretation of figure | Threshold 10–19 years old is higher than 20–29 years old | Baker et al., 1983 [ | |
| Detection (triangle test) | 0.005–0.15 | 0.03% | Higher thresholds for those liking soup/stew | Kim and Lee, 2009 [ | ||
| Detection (staircase, paired comparison) | 0.0003–5.8 | 0.021% | 52% overweight children | Threshold not related to salt intake | Bobowski & Mennella, 2015 [ | |
| Detection (paired comparison) | 0.0009–0.029 | 0.016–0.036% | Boys were less sensitive than adults | Boys had higher threshold than women | James, Laing, & Oram, 1997, [ | |
| Detection (staircase paired comparison) | 0.0012–0.08 | 0.027% | Arguelles et al., 2006 [ | |||
| Detection (staircase 4 in 8) | 0.00006–5.8 | 0.006% | Clinical population | Hertz et al., 1975 [ | ||
| Recognition | 0.02–5.8 | 0.17% | Threshold not related to body composition | Kirsten & Wagner, 2014, [ | ||
| Recognition (one solution) | - | 0.4% | 0.4% was the only solution presented | Sensitivity lowest in 4–6 graders | Ohnuki et al., 2014 [ | |
| Recognition (two solutions) | 0.18, 1.8 | 1.8% | Only two solutions tested | Majorana et al., 2012 [ | ||
| Recognition threshold (range) | 0.18–1 | 0.18% | Higher threshold in boys than girls | Okoro et al., 1998 [ |
Figure 2Children’s (1–13 years) indifference, acceptance and rejection responses to different concentrations of NaCl in foods (%NaCl w/w) and liquids (%NaCl w/v). 1 Harris & Booth 1987, higher consumption compared to unsalted version, mashed potatoes [50]; 2 Beauchamp & Moran 1986, higher (2a) or lower (2b) consumption compared to unsalted version, water [49]; 3 Beauchamp, Cowart & Moran 1990, most preferred, soup [88]; 4 Bouhlal, Chabanet, Issanchou & Nicklaus 2013, more liked than unsalted version, Pasta and green beans [97]; 5 Bouhlal, Chabanet, Issanchou & Nicklaus 2013, higher consumption compared to unsalted version, pasta [97]; 6 Bouhlal, Chabanet, Issanchou & Nicklaus 2013, higher consumption compared to unsalted version, green beans [97]; 7 Bouhlal, Issanchou & Nicklaus 2011, higher consumption compared to unsalted version, green beans [98]; 8 Bouhlal, Issanchou & Nicklaus 2011, higher consumption compared to unsalted version, pasta [98]; 9 Cowart & Beauchamp 1986, lower consumption compared to unsalted version, water [48]; 10 Cowart & Beauchamp 1986, higher consumption compared to unsalted version, soup [48]; 11 Kim & Lee 2009, most preferred, soup [66]; 12 Mennella, Finkbeiner, Lipchock, Hwang & Reed 2014, most preferred, broth [90]; 13 Verma, Mittal, Ghildiyal, Chaudhary & Mahajan 2007, more liked than unsalted version, popcorn (unclear statistics) [89].