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Appetite 1994-Dec

Development of altered taste preferences in tumor-bearing rats.

يمكن للمستخدمين المسجلين فقط ترجمة المقالات
الدخول التسجيل فى الموقع
يتم حفظ الارتباط في الحافظة
B K Smith
K Barker
M A Schork
M J Kluger

الكلمات الدالة

نبذة مختصرة

Experimental tumors induce a decline in food intake that may derive from changes in taste or the development of taste aversions. The preferences of tumor-bearing (TB) and non-tumor-bearing (NTB) rats for five chemicals (three palatable and two aversive taste stimuli) were studied in an animal model of experimental cancer employing the methylcholanthrene (MCA) sarcoma. In protocol 1, five groups of Fischer 344 rats were given 23-h, two-bottle preference tests (taste solution vs. water) daily from day 3 after tumor implantation until spontaneous death occurred. Both NTB and TB rats avoided quinine hydrochloride and hydrochloric acid solutions throughout the experiment indicating that tumor growth produced no disruption in the animals' perception of these normally aversive tastes. In both groups, preference for sucrose (88% to 97%) and saccharin (75% to 93%) remained high until days 22 and 17 respectively, but tended to decline with advanced tumor growth. In both cases, a reduction in total calorie intake preceded the changes in sucrose or saccharin preference by several days. With or without a tumor, rats exhibited approximately 50% preference for NaCl at all times. In protocol 2, a four-bottle preference test (sucrose vs. saccharin vs. NaCl vs. water) was administered before tumor implantation and again 3 weeks later when a decline in food intake was evident. Both TB and NTB rats displayed a dominant preference for sucrose over saccharin, NaCl, and water at the pre- and posttests. However, a comparison of the difference scores (pre- minus postimplantation) of NTB and TB rats showed a small but significant suppression of TB animals' preference for sucrose. The altered preferences for sweet but not salt taste stimuli suggest that food-related taste cues may be more susceptible to the development of taste aversions during cancer. However the contribution of taste changes to the anorexia of cancer remains unclear and it is possible that the changes in taste preference may be secondary to the reduction in food intake.

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