Papantoni Afroditi, Shearrer Grace E, Sadler Jennifer R, Stice Eric, Burger Kyle S
Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States.
Biomedical Research Imaging Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States.
Front Psychol. 2021 Feb 18;12:597704. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.597704. eCollection 2021.
Taste sensitivity and liking drive food choices and ingestive behaviors from childhood to adulthood, yet their longitudinal association with dietary intake and BMI is largely understudied. Here, we examined the longitudinal relationship between sugar and fat sensitivity, sugar and fat liking, habitual dietary intake, and BMI percentiles in a sample of 105 healthy-weight adolescents (baseline: BMI %tile 57.0 ± 24.3; age 14-16 years) over a 4-year period. Taste sensitivity was assessed via a triangle fat and sweet taste discrimination test. Taste liking were rated on a visual analog scale for four milkshakes that varied in sugar and fat contents (high-fat/high-sugar (HF/HS), low-fat/high-sugar (LF/HS), high-fat/low-sugar (HF/LS), low-fat/low-sugar (LF/LS) milkshakes). A modified version of the reduced Block Food Frequency Questionnaire (BFFQ) was used to assess dietary intake. All measurements were repeated annually. Repeated measures correlations and linear mixed effects models were used to model the associations between the variables. Sugar sensitivity was negatively associated with liking for the LF/HS milkshake over the 4-year period. Low sugar sensitivity at baseline predicted increases in BMI percentile over time, but this association didn't survive a correction for multiple comparisons. Percent daily intake from fat was positively associated with liking for the HF/HS milkshake and negatively associated with liking for the LF/LS milkshake over 4 years. Together, these results demonstrate that lower sensitivity to sweet taste is linked to increased hedonic response to high-sugar foods and increased energy intake from fat seems to condition adolescents to show increased liking for high-fat/high-sugar foods.
从童年到成年,味觉敏感度和喜好驱动着食物选择和摄食行为,然而它们与饮食摄入和体重指数(BMI)之间的纵向关联在很大程度上尚未得到充分研究。在此,我们在105名健康体重青少年样本(基线:BMI百分位数57.0±24.3;年龄14 - 16岁)中,对4年期间糖和脂肪敏感度、糖和脂肪喜好、习惯性饮食摄入以及BMI百分位数之间的纵向关系进行了研究。通过三角形脂肪和甜味辨别测试评估味觉敏感度。使用视觉模拟量表对四种糖和脂肪含量不同的奶昔(高脂肪/高糖(HF/HS)、低脂肪/高糖(LF/HS)、高脂肪/低糖(HF/LS)、低脂肪/低糖(LF/LS)奶昔)的味觉喜好进行评分。使用简化版的布洛克食物频率问卷(BFFQ)的修改版本来评估饮食摄入。所有测量每年重复进行。使用重复测量相关性和线性混合效应模型来模拟变量之间的关联。在4年期间,糖敏感度与对LF/HS奶昔的喜好呈负相关。基线时低糖敏感度预测随着时间推移BMI百分位数会增加,但这种关联在多重比较校正后未成立。在4年期间,每日脂肪摄入量百分比与对HF/HS奶昔的喜好呈正相关,与对LF/LS奶昔的喜好呈负相关。总之,这些结果表明,对甜味较低的敏感度与对高糖食物的享乐反应增加有关,而脂肪能量摄入增加似乎使青少年对高脂肪/高糖食物的喜好增加。