It is commonly believed that a link exists between BMI and taste perception. One group of researchers observed that women who are obese experience reduced taste sensitivity when compared to normal-weight controls. Others have compared taste sensitivity between lean and obese subjects and found no significant differences. The inconsistencies in these studies demonstrate how much variation in taste sensitivity is possible when different factors are applied in research. Throughout several studies, one element remains constant - bariatric surgery causes appetite aversions. These changes in appetite and food preference likely have a large influence on the overall magnitude of post-surgical weight loss. Although many studies have investigated the changes in taste preference after bariatric surgery, few, if any, have focused on changes in sweet taste perception.
The overall goal of the present project is to determine how future bariatric surgery will affect the taste for sweet liquids. Taste perception will be assessed before surgery (pre-operative, pre-op) and after bariatric surgery, at approximately 1 month. Taste studies will be conducted with solutions prepared freshly before each test using sucrose dissolved in distilled water. Six concentrations of sucrose (table sugar) will be tasted in random order, with the most concentrated solution being roughly the sweetness of soda. The subject is blinded to the concentrations. It is hypothesized that there will be no significant difference in taste perception when pre-op and post-op values are compared. However, the investigators hypothesize that taste preference will identify solutions with lower concentrations post-op.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
21
All subjects will complete a procedure to determine their taste sensitivity to sweet tastants.
Elizabeth Parks
Columbia, Missouri, United States
University of Missouri
Columbia, Missouri, United States
Taste Perception on an Interval Scale
Taste perception will be assessed by the subjects' responses to varying sucrose solutions. The interval scale begins with "barely detectable" at zero and goes up to "strongest imaginable" at 10. Subjects will be asked to draw an "X" at the location on the graph corresponding to their perception.
Time frame: Change from baseline to one month after bariatric surgery
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