Many patients suffer from taste disorders, but treatments are limited. That is why researchers are desperately looking for new therapeutics – and filter paper discs might be just that.
Prof. Satoru Ebihara and his colleagues developed a taste rehabilitation method using filter paper discs as a new treatment for taste disorders, and investigated whether the method was effective in healthy subjects.
42 healthy individuals were randomly assigned to either the training or the control group. The taste rehabilitation method developed by the research group consists of four steps.
In step 1, the taste perception thresholds of four tastes (sweetness, saltiness, sourness, and bitterness) were measured by the filter paper disc method, one of the taste testing methods. In step 2, participants in the training group were asked to match the four tastes between those of taste recognition thresholds and those of a one-step higher concentration until they get them right. In step 3, they were asked to match the four tastes between those of one-step lower and one-step higher in concentration from their taste recognition thresholds until they get them right. In step 4, they were asked to match the four tastes between those of one-step lower concentration and those of their taste recognition thresholds until they get them right.
The results showed that the training group significantly increased their sensitivity to all four tastes: sweetness, saltiness, sourness, and bitterness. Although there was no significant difference in the initial taste perception thresholds of the two groups, taste sensitivity increased significantly in the training group compared to the control group at day 4.
“These results indicate that the taste rehabilitation method has the potential to improve taste sensitivity and is expected to be one of the treatments to improve taste disorders”, said Ebihara, senior author of the study.
This article is based on a press release by Toho University. You can find the original publication here and by following the link in our text.
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