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Letter to the Editor
Published Online: November 1997

High Sucrose Preference in Alcoholic Men

Publication: American Journal of Psychiatry
TO THE EDITOR: Alexey Kampov-Polevoy, M.D., Ph.D., and colleagues (1) demonstrated an enhanced preference for sweet solutions in alcoholic men and suggested that this may indicate a generalized alteration in rewarding response to hedonic stimuli in those with alcohol dependence. Instead, their findings may reflect a chemosensory adjustment to the effect of alcohol on the olfactory system. Both acute alcohol intoxication (2) and chronic alcoholism (3) are associated with an impaired olfactory ability. Smell is approximately 90% of what is described as “taste” or flavor; hyposmic individuals perceive food as bland or tasteless (4). In order to compensate, spices and enhanced true taste (e.g., sugar) are added to food (5). Therefore, through a learned response paradigm, these alcoholic men may have developed preference for a higher concentration of sugars, even in the absence of other foods. Alternatively, because of chronic excess daily use of sugars, they may have induced an up-regulation of their sweet taste receptors, raising their sucrose threshold, and the associated sucrose hedonic curve (6).
Thus, preference for higher sucrose concentration in alcoholic men may just represent a behavioral compensatory response for those with alcohol-induced olfactory loss.

References

1.
Kampov-Polevoy A, Garbutt JC, Janowsky D: Evidence of preference for a high-concentration sucrose solution in alcoholic men. Am J Psychiatry 1997; 154:269–270
2.
Hirsch AR, Russell GS: Effects of inebriation on olfaction. Investigative Med 1995; 43:422A
3.
Mair RG, Doty RL, Kelly KM, Wilson CS, Langlias PS, McEntree WJ, Vollmecke TA: Multimodal sensory discrimination deficits in Korsakoff's psychosis. Neuropsychologia 1986; 24:831–839
4.
Hirsch AR: Olfaction in migraineurs. Headache 1992; 32:233–236
5.
Ferris AM, Schlitzer JL, Schierberl MJ, Catalanotto FA, Gent J, Peterson MG, Bartoshuk LM, Cain WS, Goodspeed RB, Leonard G, Donaldson JO: Anosmia and nutritional status. Nutr Res 1985; 5:149–156
6.
Contreras RJ: Gustatory mechanisms of a specific appetite, in Neural Mechanisms in Taste. Edited by Cagan RH. Boca Raton, Fla, CRC Press, 1989, pp 119–145

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 1631
PubMed: 9356589

History

Published in print: November 1997
Published online: 1 April 2006

Authors

Details

Alan R. Hirsch, M.D.
Chicago, Ill.

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