WHAT'S HOT:
Obese kids 'have less sensitive taste-buds'
Sep 20, 10:59 am
Washington, September 20 (ANI): Obese children have less sensitive taste-buds as compared to normal weight, a new study has claimed.The authors suggest that this blunted ability to distinguish all five tastes of bitter, sweet, salty, sour, and umami (savoury) may prompt them to eat larger quantities of food in a bid to register the same taste sensation.They base their findings on 94 normal weight and 99 obese children aged between 6 and 18, who were in good health and not taking any medications known to affect taste and smell.The taste sensitivity of every child was tested using 22 "taste strips" placed on the tongue, to include each of the five taste sensations, at four different levels of intensity, plus two blank strips.Each child was asked to refrain from eating or drinking anything other than water and not to chew gum for at least an hour before they took the two tests, which involved identifying the different tastes and their intensity.The sum of all five taste sensations at the four different intensities allowed for a maximum score of 20, with scores ranging from two to 19.Girls and older children were better at picking out the right tastes.Overall, the children were best able to differentiate between sweet and salty, but found it hardest to distinguish between salty and sour, and between salty and umami.Additionally, obese children found it significantly more difficult to identify the different taste sensations, scoring an average of 12.6 compared with an average of just over 14 clocked up by children of normal weight.
Obese children were significantly less likely to identify the individual taste sensations correctly, particularly salty, umami, and bitter.And while both obese and normal weight children correctly identified all the differing levels of sweetness, obese kids rated three out of the four intensity levels lower than kids of normal weight.Similarly, children of normal weight were better able to distinguish the different taste sensations, the older they were, but this trend was not seen among the obese children.Exactly why people have differing taste perceptions is unclear, but genes, hormones, acculturation and exposure to different tastes early in life are all thought to play a part, say the authors.But previous research indicates that heightened sensitivity to different taste sensations may help to reduce the amount of food eaten as less is required to get the same "taste hit".The study has been published online in Archives of Disease in Childhood. (ANI)
Exposure to chemical in plastic may increase risk of prostate cancer
Jun 18, 12:46 pm
Washington, June 18 (ANI): Exposing developing tissue to low levels of the plastic bisphenol A (BPA) is associated to a greater incidence of prostate cancer in tissue grown from human prostate stem cells.
Full Story »
Testosterone boosts postmenopausal women's memory
Jun 18, 12:00 pm
Washington, June 18 (ANI): Postmenopausal women's verbal learning and memory improved after they were treated with testosterone gel, a new study has found.
Full Story »
Moderate drinking during pregnancy may not harm baby's development
Jun 18, 10:29 am
Washington, June 18 (ANI): Drinking 3 to 7 glasses of alcohol a week, during pregnancy, does not seem to harm foetal neurodevelopment, a new study has claimed.
Full Story »
Psychiatric disorders linked to protein involved in memory formation
Jun 17, 5:05 pm
London, June 17(ANI): A new study has linked psychiatric disorders have to a protein involved in the formation of long-term memories.
Full Story »
Comments
LATEST STORIES
-
974640
- Global cooling may also affect marine life
- China may take 18 years to 'clear air' under country's anti-pollution campaign
- Gene variants to predict women benefitting from breast cancer prevention drugs
- Monkeys have reasoning powers like primitive humans
- Pain causing protein may hold key to better treatment of arthritis
- New brain-imaging technique can help improve diagnoses of Parkinson's disease
- Drug to treat osteoporosis prevents growth of breast cancer cells
- Mind-controlled limbs could give amputees sense of touch
- Study into oceans' past raises concern about its future
- Maths can help kill cancer cells
TOP VIDEO STORIES
PHOTO GALLERY
- HOME
- NATIONAL
- WORLD
- SPORTS
- ENTERTAINMENT
- LIFESTYLE
- HEALTH
- SCIENCE
- TECH
- WORK
- SPACE
- ABOUT US
- PRIVACY POLICY
- CONTACT US
- ADVERTISE WITH US
- FEEDBACK
- SITEMAP
Copyright © 2010 aninews.in All rights reserved.
RSS




