Taste Function in Adult Humans from Lean Condition to Stage II Obesity: Interactions with Biochemical Regulators, Dietary Habits, and Clinical Aspects

Author:

Micarelli Alessandro1ORCID,Vezzoli Alessandra2ORCID,Malacrida Sandro3ORCID,Micarelli Beatrice1,Misici Ilaria1ORCID,Carbini Valentina1,Iennaco Ilaria1,Caputo Sara4,Mrakic-Sposta Simona2ORCID,Alessandrini Marco5

Affiliation:

1. Unit of Neuroscience, Rehabilitation and Sensory Organs, UNITER ONLUS, 02032 Rome, Italy

2. Institute of Clinical Physiology, National Research Council (CNR), 20162 Milan, Italy

3. Institute of Mountain Emergency Medicine, Eurac Research, 39100 Bolzano, Italy

4. L-Nutra Italia S.r.l., 20122 Milan, Italy

5. ENT Unit, Department of Clinical Sciences and Translational Medicine, University of Rome Tor Vergata, 00133 Rome, Italy

Abstract

Differences in gustatory sensitivity, nutritional habits, circulating levels of modulators, anthropometric measures, and metabolic assays may be involved in overweight (OW) development. The present study aimed at evaluating the differences in these aspects between 39 OW (19 female; mean age = 53.51 ± 11.17), 18 stage I (11 female; mean age = 54.3 ± 13.1 years), and 20 II (10 female; mean age = 54.5 ± 11.9) obesity participants when compared with 60 lean subjects (LS; 29 female; mean age = 54.04 ± 10.27). Participants were evaluated based on taste function scores, nutritional habits, levels of modulators (leptin, insulin, ghrelin, and glucose), and bioelectrical impedance analysis measurements. Significant reductions in total and subtests taste scores were found between LS and stage I and II obesity participants. Significant reductions in total and all subtests taste scores were found between OW and stage II obesity participants. Together with the progressive increase in plasmatic leptin levels, insulin, and serum glucose, decrease in plasmatic ghrelin levels, and changes in anthropometric measures and nutritional habits along with body mass index, these data for the first time demonstrated that taste sensitivity, biochemical regulators, and food habits play a parallel, concurring role along the stages evolving to obesity.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

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