Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA 19104-3308, USA.
Clin Ther. 2013 Aug;35(8):1225-46. doi: 10.1016/j.clinthera.2013.06.007. Epub 2013 Jul 22.
Many active pharmaceutical ingredients taste bitter and thus are aversive to children as well as many adults. Encapsulation of the medicine in pill or tablet form, an effective method for adults to avoid the unpleasant taste, is problematic for children. Many children cannot or will not swallow solid dose forms.
This review highlights basic principles of gustatory function, with a special focus on the science of bitter taste, derived from studies of animal models and human psychophysics. We focus on the set of genes that encode the proteins that function as bitter receptors as well as the cascade of events that leads to multidimensional aspects of taste function, highlighting the role that animal models played in these discoveries. We also summarize psychophysical approaches to studying bitter taste in adult and pediatric populations, highlighting evidence of the similarities and differences in bitter taste perception and acceptance between adults and children and drawing on useful strategies from animal models.
Medicine often tastes bitter, and because children are more bitter-sensitive than are adults, this creates problems with compliance. Bitter arises from stimulating receptors in taste receptor cells, with signals processed in the taste bud and relayed to the brain. However, there are many gaps in our understanding of how best to measure bitterness and how to ameliorate it, including whether it is more efficiently addressed at the level of receptor and sensory signaling, at the level of central processing, or by masking techniques. All methods of measuring responsiveness to bitter ligands-in animal models through human psychophysics or with "electronic tongues"-have limitations.
Better-tasting medications may enhance pediatric adherence to drug therapy. Sugars, acids, salt, and other substances reduce perceived bitterness of several pharmaceuticals, and although pleasant flavorings may help children consume some medicines, they often are not effective in suppressing bitter tastes. Further development of psychophysical tools for children will help us better understand their sensory worlds. Multiple testing strategies will help us refine methods to assess acceptance and compliance by various pediatric populations. Research involving animal models, in which the gustatory system can be more invasively manipulated, can elucidate mechanisms, ultimately providing potential targets. These approaches, combined with new technologies and guided by findings from clinical studies, will potentially lead to effective ways to enhance drug acceptance and compliance in pediatric populations.
许多活性药物成分味道苦涩,因此不仅儿童,许多成年人也不喜欢。将药物封装成药丸或片剂是成年人避免不良口感的有效方法,但对于儿童来说却存在问题。许多儿童无法或不愿意吞咽固体剂型。
本综述重点介绍味觉功能的基本原理,特别关注苦味的科学,这是从动物模型和人类心理物理学研究中得出的。我们专注于编码作为苦味受体发挥作用的蛋白质的基因集,以及导致味觉功能多维方面的事件级联,突出动物模型在这些发现中所起的作用。我们还总结了成人和儿科人群苦味的心理物理学研究方法,重点介绍了成人和儿童苦味感知和接受方面的相似性和差异性的证据,并借鉴了动物模型中的有用策略。
药物通常味道苦涩,由于儿童比成人更敏感于苦味,这就导致了用药依从性的问题。苦味源于刺激味觉受体细胞中的受体,信号在味蕾中处理,并传递到大脑。然而,我们对如何最好地测量苦味以及如何改善苦味的理解还存在许多空白,包括是否在受体和感觉信号水平、中枢处理水平或通过掩蔽技术更有效地解决这个问题。在动物模型中通过人类心理物理学或使用“电子舌”来测量对苦味配体的反应的所有方法都存在局限性。
改善口感的药物可能会提高儿科患者对药物治疗的依从性。糖、酸、盐和其他物质可以降低几种药物的苦味感知,虽然美味的调味料可以帮助儿童服用一些药物,但它们通常无法有效抑制苦味。为儿童开发更好的心理物理学工具将有助于我们更好地了解他们的感官世界。多种测试策略将有助于我们完善评估各种儿科人群接受度和依从性的方法。涉及动物模型的研究,其中味觉系统可以更具侵入性地进行操作,可以阐明机制,最终提供潜在的目标。这些方法,结合新技术,并由临床研究结果指导,将有可能为提高儿科人群的药物接受度和依从性提供有效途径。