Children love sweets, but have you ever wondered why
some of them want more sugary food? It could be because they need more
sugar to get that same sweet taste that others get in less quantities,
suggests new research.
“Some children are 20 times
better at detecting sugar than others,” said study author Danielle Reed
from Monell Chemical Senses Centre, a non-profit independent scientific
institute in the U.S.
“As sugar becomes more
restricted and even regulated in children’s diets, the less
sugar-sensitive children may get less of a ‘sweet signal’ and,
therefore, have a harder time dealing with sugar reduction,” Reed said.
In
the study, the researchers determined the sweet taste threshold,
defined as the lowest detectable level of sucrose, of 216 healthy
children between the ages seven and 14. Each child was given two cups,
one containing distilled water and the other containing a sugar solution
and asked to indicate which contained a taste.
The
most sensitive child required only 0.005 teaspoon of sugar dissolved in a
cup of water to detect sweetness, whereas the least sensitive needed
three teaspoons to get the same sensation.
Genotype
analyses revealed that sucrose thresholds and sensitivity were related
to variation in the bitter receptor gene, but not in the two sweet
receptor genes.
Dietary records revealed that
children having this same bitter-sensitive gene variant consumed a
higher percentage of their daily calories as added sugar.
“We
were surprised to find that sweet taste sensitivity and sugar
consumption were related to a bitter receptor gene,” Reed noted.
The researchers also found that increased body fat was associated with greater sensitivity to sweet taste.
The study was published online in the journal
Nursing Research
. — IANS
Source :- The Hindu, 17-Dec-2015
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