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Published Online: 1 December 2013

Response to Vicario

To the Editor: We did not review the disgust literature in our article because we chose a “pure” sweet taste with positive valence. But it is certainly reasonable to raise the question of whether disgust plays a role in aberrant eating behavior. We are aware of only one imaging study that has addressed this issue. Relative to comparison subjects, Cowdrey et al. (1) observed that individuals recovered from anorexia nervosa showed increased neural response to a pleasant chocolate taste in the ventral striatum but increased neural response to an aversive strawberry taste in the insula and putamen. Because the study design may have evoked an anticipatory component (2, 3), it is problematic to directly compare it to our present study. However, it does raise the possibility of some difference in insula response to pleasure and aversive stimuli in anorexia nervosa. It would be worthwhile to design studies that seek to disentangle pleasure and disgust. In summary, Dr. Vicario is correct in suggesting insula involvement in processing disgust response to gustatory stimuli, and the hypothesis of “altered disgust sensitivity” related to insula processing should be further explored.

References

1.
Cowdrey FA, Park RJ, Harmer CJ, McCabe C: Increased neural processing of rewarding and aversive food stimuli in recovered anorexia nervosa. Biol Psychiatry 2011; 70:736–743
2.
Kaye WH, Wierenga CE, Bailer UF, Simmons AN, Wagner A, Bischoff-Grethe A: Does a shared neurobiology for foods and drugs of abuse contribute to extremes of food ingestion in anorexia and bulimia nervosa? Biol Psychiatry 2013; 73:836–842
3.
Oberndorfer T, Simmons A, McCurdy D, Strigo I, Matthews S, Yang T, Irvine Z, Kaye W: Increased anterior insula activation during anticipation of food images in women recovered from anorexia nervosa. Psychiatry Res Neuroimaging (Epub ahead of print, Aug 28, 2013)

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 1497
PubMed: 24306342

History

Accepted: August 2013
Published online: 1 December 2013
Published in print: December 2013

Authors

Affiliations

Walter H. Kaye, M.D.
From the Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, Western Psychiatric Institute & Clinic, Pittsburgh.

Competing Interests

The author’s disclosures accompany the original article.

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