1. PERCEIVED INTENSITY AND PLEASANTNESS OF SUCROSE TASTE IN MALE ALCOHOLICS.
- Author
-
Wronski, Michal, Skrok-Wolska, Dominika, Samochowiec, Jerzy, Ziolkowski, Marcin, Swiecicki, Lukasz, Bienkowski, Przemyslaw, Korkosz, Agnieszka, Zatorski, Paweł, Kukwa, Wojciech, and Scinska, Anna
- Subjects
FLAVOR ,SWEETNESS (Taste) ,SUCROSE ,PEOPLE with alcoholism ,ALCOHOL drinking ,DRINKING behavior ,ALCOHOLISM education ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,SUBSTANCE abuse - Abstract
Aims: The aim of the present study was to evaluate a possible relationship between taste responses to Sweet solutions and alcoholic Status. Methods: The rated intensity and pleasantness of sucrose taste was compared in male alcoholics (n = 45) and non-alcoholic controls (n = 33). Results: The rated intensity, but not pleasantness, of water taste (0% sucrose) was higher in the alcoholics. The two groups did not differ with respect to the rated intensity or pleasantness of sucrose solutions (1-30%). The proportion of sweet-likers, i.e. subjects rating 30% sucrose as most pleasant, was similar in both groups (the controls: 57.6%, the alcoholics: 62.2%). A sub- group of alcoholics with a paternal history of alcoholism (n = 22) rated the highest sucrose concentration as more pleasant compared to alcoholics without alcoholic fathers. The proportion of sweet-likers among the alcoholics with a paternal history of alcoholism (77.3%) was significantly higher than that found in the alcoholics without a familial history of alcoholism (47.8%). Conclusions: The present results suggest the following: (i) alcohol dependence is not associated with any major alterations in taste responses to sucrose solutions, (ii) sweet liking is a phenotypic marker of male alcoholics with a paternal history of alcoholism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF