Gydus Julia, Holman Katherine, Harshman Stephanie, Stull Madeline, Kuhnle Megan, Wons Olivia, Asanza Elisa, Hauser Kristine, Stern Casey, Becker Kendra R, Kambanis P Evelyna, Misra Madhusmita, Eddy Kamryn T, Micali Nadia, Lawson Elizabeth A, Thomas Jennifer J
Neuroendocrine Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Eating Disorders Clinical and Research Program, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Int J Eat Disord. 2025 Apr;58(4):703-713. doi: 10.1002/eat.24358. Epub 2025 Jan 17.
Individuals with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) self-report heightened sensitivity to taste and smell, but neither phenomenon has been systematically explored in the laboratory. We hypothesized that, compared to healthy controls (HC, n = 34), children, adolescents, and adults with full/subthreshold ARFID (n = 100; ages 9 to 23 years) would self-report heightened response to taste/smell stimuli and exhibit stronger bitter taste perception and heightened smell perception in performance-based tasks, and these differences would be especially prominent in those with the ARFID-sensory sensitivity presentation.
We measured self-reported sensitivity to taste/smell with the adolescent/adult sensory profile (AASP). We measured performance-based bitter taste perception with the regional taste intensity test (RTIT) and 6-N-propylthiouracil (PROP) test, and olfactory performance with the Sniffin' Sticks test (including the odor threshold, odor detection, and odor identification subscales).
As expected, the ARFID group self-reported heightened response to taste/smell on the AASP, compared to HC, with an especially large effect size in the subset with the ARFID-sensory sensitivity presentation. Contrary to hypotheses, on performance-based measures, neither the ARFID group-nor the ARFID-sensory sensitivity group specifically-demonstrated heightened sensitivity to bitter taste on the RTIT or PROP tests, nor heightened smell perception on the Sniffin' Sticks test.
These first laboratory findings in a clinically diagnosed sample of individuals with full/subthreshold ARFID highlight the discrepancy between perceived versus actual sensitivity to taste/smell stimuli. Future research should explore whether this discrepancy can be replicated and therapeutically leveraged to facilitate successful food exposures.
患有回避/限制性食物摄入障碍(ARFID)的个体自我报告称对味觉和嗅觉的敏感度较高,但这两种现象均未在实验室中得到系统研究。我们假设,与健康对照组(HC,n = 34)相比,患有完全型/亚阈值ARFID的儿童、青少年和成年人(n = 100;年龄9至23岁)在自我报告中对味觉/嗅觉刺激的反应会增强,并且在基于表现的任务中表现出更强的苦味感知和更高的嗅觉感知,而这些差异在具有ARFID-感觉敏感表现的个体中尤为突出。
我们使用青少年/成人感觉概况量表(AASP)测量自我报告的味觉/嗅觉敏感度。我们使用区域味觉强度测试(RTIT)和6-N-丙基硫氧嘧啶(PROP)测试测量基于表现的苦味感知,并使用嗅觉棒测试(包括气味阈值、气味检测和气味识别子量表)测量嗅觉表现。
正如预期的那样,与HC相比,ARFID组在AASP上自我报告对味觉/嗅觉的反应增强,在具有ARFID-感觉敏感表现的子集中效应量尤其大。与假设相反,在基于表现的测量中,ARFID组以及特定的ARFID-感觉敏感组在RTIT或PROP测试中均未表现出对苦味的敏感度增加,在嗅觉棒测试中也未表现出嗅觉感知增强。
这些在临床诊断的完全型/亚阈值ARFID个体样本中的首批实验室研究结果突出了对味觉/嗅觉刺激的感知敏感度与实际敏感度之间的差异。未来的研究应探索这种差异是否可以复制并在治疗中加以利用,以促进成功的食物接触。