SENSORY IRRITATION AND TASTE PRODUCED BY NACL AND CITRIC-ACID - EFFECTS OF CAPSAICIN DESENSITIZATION

Citation
Mm. Gilmore et Bg. Green, SENSORY IRRITATION AND TASTE PRODUCED BY NACL AND CITRIC-ACID - EFFECTS OF CAPSAICIN DESENSITIZATION, Chemical senses, 18(3), 1993, pp. 257-272
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Physiology,Neurosciences,Chemistry
Journal title
ISSN journal
0379864X
Volume
18
Issue
3
Year of publication
1993
Pages
257 - 272
Database
ISI
SICI code
0379-864X(1993)18:3<257:SIATPB>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
Three experiments were conducted to measure the sensory irritation pro duced by two prototypical gustatory stimuli: citric acid and NaCl. The stimuli were applied to the tip of the tongue on filter paper disks. The first experiment revealed that solutions of NaCl and citric acid t hat produced approximately equal taste sensations also produced simila r amounts of irritation; that the psychophysical functions for irritat ion were approximately twice as steep as the functions for taste; and that irritation grew over time for NaCl but not for citric acid. When viewed as a percentage of the taste sensation at 25 s, NaCl irritation averaged 23% at the lowest concentration and 70% at the highest conce ntration; citric acid irritation averaged 44% at the lowest concentrat ion and 98% at the highest concentration. The second experiment invest igated whether the irritation produced by these two stimuli was mediat ed via capsaicin-sensitive (CS) fibers. The experiment included a pre- test, an irritation treatment with either capsaicin (a desensitizing a gent) or zingerone (a non-desensitizing agent), a 15 min rest period a nd a post-test. Reductions in irritation and taste occurred following treatment with both capsaicin and zingerone. A third experiment demons trated that the majority of the effect of zingerone on taste and irrit ation was due to a perceptual context effect. After the context effect was taken into account, capsaicin desensitization remained significan t for both salt taste and salt irritation at the highest concentration . A similar pattern of results for citric acid suggests that both citr ic acid and NaCl produce irritation in part via CS fibers. The results are discussed in terms of the ability of subjects to discriminate the gustatory and chemesthetic components of oral sensations and the role of salt and acid irritation in flavor perception.