Bartoshuk L M
John B. Pierce Foundation Laboratory, New Haven, Connecticut.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1989;561:65-75. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1989.tb20970.x.
The prevalence of taste loss over a discrete area of the tongue or palate is unknown; however, we have identified discrete losses in three etiological groups: head trauma, upper respiratory infection, and bulimia. We have now identified discrete losses in elderly subjects. To summarize, elderly subjects show elevated taste thresholds for some taste stimuli. Mild dysgeusia may act as a masking stimulus that makes taste thresholds appear to be elevated, and this may be more common in the elderly than the young. Discrete taste losses occur more often among the elderly than the young but usually go unnoticed (although these losses may contribute to elevated thresholds when the test procedure stimulates an area of loss). When the samples are at high concentrations, when the subject judges total intensity rather than typical quality, and when the whole mouth is used to do the tasting, the taste responses of elderly subjects look much like those of the young. Two factors contribute to the failure of people to notice localized taste loss. First, there appear to be mutually inhibitory connections between various taste loci such that if taste input from one area is blocked, the inhibition from that area is also blocked. This results in increases in perceived taste from the other areas. Second, a blank spot for taste can go unnoticed because taste is poorly localized. We can demonstrate this with an illusion. If a taste solution is painted from an area with receptors into an area that does not have receptors, the taste sensation seems to invade the area with no receptors. We suggest that a similar phenomenon may occur with areas from which receptors are lost. This localization illusion could then prevent a subject from noticing that an area has lost taste function. The discovery of discrete taste losses in a population of elderly subjects suggests that earlier failures to find substantial taste losses with age may reflect the redundancy of the taste system. This possibility raises the question of what functions taste subserves that require this kind of redundancy. The taste system appears to be "hard wired" to maintain the constancy of perceived intensity even if substantial taste areas are damaged. This constancy suggests that taste is serving important biological functions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
舌或上颚某一离散区域味觉丧失的患病率尚不清楚;然而,我们已在三个病因组中发现了离散性味觉丧失:头部外伤、上呼吸道感染和贪食症。我们现在又在老年受试者中发现了离散性味觉丧失。总之,老年受试者对某些味觉刺激的味觉阈值升高。轻度味觉障碍可能起到一种掩盖刺激的作用,使味觉阈值看起来升高,而且这种情况在老年人中可能比年轻人更常见。离散性味觉丧失在老年人中比年轻人更常发生,但通常未被注意到(尽管当测试程序刺激到丧失区域时,这些丧失可能导致阈值升高)。当样本浓度较高、受试者判断的是总体强度而非典型品质,以及用整个口腔进行品尝时,老年受试者的味觉反应与年轻人的非常相似。有两个因素导致人们未注意到局部味觉丧失。首先,不同味觉位点之间似乎存在相互抑制性联系,这样如果来自一个区域的味觉输入被阻断,该区域的抑制作用也会被阻断。这会导致其他区域的味觉感知增强。其次,味觉盲点可能未被注意到,因为味觉的定位很差。我们可以用一个错觉来证明这一点。如果将一种味觉溶液从有感受器的区域涂抹到没有感受器的区域,味觉感觉似乎会侵入没有感受器的区域。我们认为,在感受器丧失的区域可能会发生类似现象。这种定位错觉可能会使受试者注意不到某个区域已经丧失了味觉功能。在老年受试者群体中发现离散性味觉丧失表明,早期未能发现随着年龄增长出现大量味觉丧失的情况可能反映了味觉系统的冗余性。这种可能性引发了一个问题,即味觉具有何种功能需要这种冗余性。即使大量味觉区域受损,味觉系统似乎也“固有地”维持着感知强度的恒定。这种恒定性表明味觉在发挥重要的生物学功能。(摘要截选至400词)