Taste detection and recognition thresholds in Japanese patients with Alzheimer-type dementia

Alzheimer-type dementia (AD) is pathologically characterized by massive neuronal loss in the brain, and the taste cortex is thought to be affected. However, there are only a few reports regarding the gustatory function of AD patients, and the conclusions of this research are inconsistent. This prosp...

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Published inAuris, nasus, larynx Vol. 44; no. 2; pp. 168 - 173
Main Authors Ogawa, Takao, Irikawa, Naoya, Yanagisawa, Daijiro, Shiino, Akihiko, Tooyama, Ikuo, Shimizu, Takeshi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.04.2017
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ISSN0385-8146
1879-1476
1879-1476
DOI10.1016/j.anl.2016.06.010

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Summary:Alzheimer-type dementia (AD) is pathologically characterized by massive neuronal loss in the brain, and the taste cortex is thought to be affected. However, there are only a few reports regarding the gustatory function of AD patients, and the conclusions of this research are inconsistent. This prospective study enrolled 22 consecutive patients with mild to moderately severe Alzheimer-type dementia (AD) with mean age of 84.0 years, and 49 elderly volunteers without dementia with mean age of 71.0 years as control subjects. The control subjects were divided into two groups according to age: a younger group (N=28, mean age: 68.5) and an older group (N=21, mean age: 83.0). The gustatory function was investigated using the filter paper disc method (FPD) and electrogustometry (EGM). The gustatory function as measured by the FPD was significantly impaired in patients with AD as compared with age-matched control subjects; no such difference was found between the younger and the older control groups. On the other hand, as for the EGM thresholds, there were no differences between the AD patient group and the age-matched controls. The FPD method demonstrated decreased gustatory function in AD patients beyond that of aging. On the other hand, EGM thresholds did not differ between the AD patient group and the age-matched controls. These results suggest that failure of taste processing in the brain, but not taste transmission in the peripheral taste system, occurs in patients with AD.
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ISSN:0385-8146
1879-1476
1879-1476
DOI:10.1016/j.anl.2016.06.010