Literature DB >> 8590030

Taste sensitivity and aging: high incidence of decline revealed by repeated threshold measures.

J C Stevens1, L A Cruz, J M Hoffman, M Q Patterson.   

Abstract

Contrary to what has often been said about the subject, decline in taste sensitivity with aging characterizes virtually everybody and is not the artificial result of averaging large losses of a minority with negligible losses of a majority. This assertion is supported by six repeated measures of sucrose thresholds in each of 15 older (over 64 years) and 15 younger (under 27 years) adult subjects. Threshold was determined by a procedure similar to past studies and with the same results: much scatter and considerable overlap between the thresholds of younger and older subjects. A quite contrasting picture emerges, however, when each subject's six threshold determinations are averaged. Averaging shrinks the individual differences among subjects, as well as the over-lap between younger and older subjects. Although virtually all elderly subjects now revealed taste weakness, reliable individual differences in degree of weakness abound among them, suggesting various individual rates of physiological aging. In contrast, young persons exhibit greater uniformity of sensitivity. These findings were brought out by inter-test correlations, which were much higher for the older subjects; i.e. an older subject who tended to score high (low) on one test tended to score high (low) on the other tests. The study confirms the tenuous nature of brief threshold tests as indices of personal sensitivity as found earlier also in olfactory thresholds and in concurrent measurement of two-point touch thresholds in the present study. This revealed correlated losses between repeated taste and touch thresholds from the same 15 older subjects, unrelated to their exact chronological age.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8590030     DOI: 10.1093/chemse/20.4.451

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chem Senses        ISSN: 0379-864X            Impact factor:   3.160


  15 in total

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2.  Sweet Thermal Taste: Perceptual Characteristics in Water and Dependence on TAS1R2/TAS1R3.

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3.  Individual differences in sour and salt sensitivity: detection and quality recognition thresholds for citric acid and sodium chloride.

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5.  Taste function evaluation after tonsillectomy: a prospective study of 60 patients.

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6.  Can age-related CNS taste differences be detected as early as middle age? Evidence from fMRI.

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7.  Optimal preferred MSG concentration in potatoes, spinach and beef and their effect on intake in institutionalized elderly people.

Authors:  N H Essed; P Oerlemans; M Hoek; W A Van Staveren; F J Kok; C De Graaf
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8.  [Swallowing and dysphagia in the elderly].

Authors:  M Jungheim; C Schwemmle; S Miller; D Kühn; M Ptok
Journal:  HNO       Date:  2014-09       Impact factor: 1.284

9.  The effect of barium on perceptions of taste intensity and palatability.

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Review 10.  Atypical interoception as a common risk factor for psychopathology: A review.

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Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2021-08-03       Impact factor: 8.989

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