Unbound MEDLINE

Sweetness and bitterness taste of meals per se does not mediate gastric emptying in humans. American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology [Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol] Journal article

 
TitleSweetness and bitterness taste of meals per se does not mediate gastric emptying in humans.
Author(s)Little TJ, Gupta N, Case RM, Thompson DG, McLaughlin JT 
InstitutionUniversity of Manchester.
SourceAm J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 2009 Jun 17.
AbstractBackground: In cell line and animal models sweet and bitter tastants induce secretion of signaling peptides (e.g. GLP-1 and CCK) and slow gastric emptying (GE). Whether human GE and appetite responses are regulated by the sweetness or bitterness per se or ingested food is, however, unknown.
Aims: To determine whether intragastric infusion of "equi-sweet" (Study A) or "equi-bitter" (Study B) solutions slow GE to the same extent, and whether a glucose solution made sweeter by the addition of saccharin will slow GE more potently than glucose alone.
Methods: Healthy non-obese subjects were studied in a single-blind, randomized fashion. Subjects received 500 ml intragastric infusions of pre-determined "equi-sweet" solutions of glucose (560 mOsmol), fructose (290 mOsmol), aspartame (200 mg), saccharin (50 mg); twice as sweet glucose+saccharin, or water (volumetric control) (Study A), or "equi-bitter" solutions of quinine (0.198 mM), naringin (1 mM), or water (Study B). GE was evaluated using a 13C-acetate breath test, and hunger and fullness scored using visual analogue scales.
Results: Study A: Equi-sweet solutions did not empty similarly. Fructose, aspartame and saccharin did not slow GE compared to water, but glucose did (P<0.05). There was no additional effect of the sweeter glucose+saccharin solution (P > 0.05, compared with glucose alone). Study B: Neither bitter tastant slowed GE compared with water. None of the solutions modulated perceptions of hunger or fullness.
Conclusions: In man, the presence of sweetness and bitterness taste per se in ingested solutions does not appear to signal to influence GE or appetite perceptions. Key words: taste, gastrointestinal tract, sweet, bitter.
LanguageENG
Pub Type(s)JOURNAL ARTICLE
PubMed ID19535679
  
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