Abstract
Bariatric surgery is the most effective treatment for severe obesity and its related comorbidities. Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RYGB) and Sleeve Gastrectomy (SG) are currently the most popular weight-loss surgeries used worldwide. Following these surgeries, many patients self-report changes in taste perception and decreased preference for unhealthy foods. These reported changes might account for increased adherence to healthier diets and successful weight loss after surgeries. However, researchers have used a variety of methodologies to assess patients’ reported changes andresults are discrepant. The goal of this review is to summarize the literature regarding changes to taste function and ingestive behavior following RYGB and SG to examine differences in findings by methodology (indirect vs. direct measurements). We focused our review around changes in sweets, fats, and alcohol because most of the documented changes in ingestive behavior post-surgery are related to changes in these dietary items. We found that studies using surveys and questionnaires generally find that subjects self-report changes in taste and decrease their preference and cravings for energy-dense foods (particularly, sweets and high-fats). However, studies using validated sensory techniques that include oral sampling or by using direct food intake measurements find little to no change in subjects’ ability to perceive taste or their preference for energy-dense foods. Therefore, reported changes in taste and food preferences are unlikely to be explained by alterations in taste intensity and diet selection, and are rather related to changes in the rewarding value of food. Further, that RYGB, and likely SG, is associated with increased alcohol consumption and arisk to develop an alcohol use disorder) supports the notion that these surgeries alter central circuits of reward that are critical in the regulation of ingestive behavior.
1. Introduction
To date, bariatric surgery is the most successful long-term treatment for severe obesity and its related comorbidities. Patients who receive these types of surgeries can experience a reduction or remission of obesity-related comorbidities such as type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and decreased insulin resistance (Courcoulas, et al., 2018; Jakobsen, et al., 2018), as well as the potential to lose an average of ~60% of their excess body weight (Buchwald, et al., 2009). The most common surgeries currently performed in United States and worldwide are sleeve gastrectomy (SG) and Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) (Angrisani, et al., 2018). While laparoscopic gastric banding (LAGB) has been a surgical procedure commonly used in the past, this method has been phasing out of popularity (Angrisani, et al., 2018) due to variable, generally smaller weight loss, a higher risk for weight regain, and, therefore, a reduced improvement in glucose control after this surgery when compared to other bariatric procedures like RYGB (Holter, et al., 2017). Thus, LAGB will be briefly mentioned in this review only when used as a direct control group for weight-loss independent effects of RYGB or SG.
RYGB surgery involves creating a small gastric pouch that is attached directly to the jejunum to create the “Roux limb”. The bypassed distal stomach, duodenum, and proximal jejunum are reattached to the distal jejunum to create the common channel. The SG procedure involves removing 2/3 of the stomach along the greater curve, creating a “sleeve-like” structure. Both of these procedures modify the route of ingested nutrients, enabling them to enter the small intestine directly (in RYGB) or faster (in SG). This rerouting of nutrients alters post-ingestive hormones such as peptide YY (PYY), glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1), and others that are involved in the regulation of hunger and satiety and also influence brain regions involved in food and drug reward (De Silva, et al., 2011; Morínigo, et al., 2006). Therefore, it is not surprising that patients who undergo these types of surgeries report changes in their appetite, food preferences, and aspects of flavor perception (Graham, Murty, & Bowrey, 2014; Makaronidis, et al., 2016).
Flavor perception integrates cues from our five senses, but it is mainly driven by taste and retronasal smell, which is when compounds from food activate the olfactory epithelium through the back of the oral cavity (Chaudhari & Roper, 2010). However, people tend to mistakenly use taste as a synonym of flavor, and the intimate entwining of these chemical senses causes people to misappropriate sensations arising from retronasal smell as if they were arising from the taste system (e.g. vanilla “taste”) (Rozin, 1982). In addition, taste function involves different aspects including a sensory-discriminative component (i.e. taste quality and intensity) and a hedonic component (i.e. degree of pleasantness/unpleasantness) (Breslin & Spector, 2008). Therefore, a considerable limitation of studies that examine changes in taste function after undergoing bariatric surgery by using questionnaires is that it is unclear what patients actually mean when they report a change in “taste”. Are they referring to a change in taste or in flavor perception? Additionally, are they referring to changes in perception of stimulus strength, stimulus quality, or hedonic value?
This review will focus mainly on how bariatric surgery may change “taste function” (rather than flavor perception) and ingestive behavior. There are some studies that have examined how bariatric surgery may change orthonasal smell (i.e. smelling through sniffing during inspiration), all finding a similar trend of some form of orthonasal impairment in pre-surgery subjects that was improved after weight loss induced by RYGB (Zerrweck, Gallardo, Calleja, Sepúlveda, & Guilber, 2017), SG (Hancı, et al., 2016; Jurowich, et al., 2014), or both procedures (Holinski, Menenakos, Haber, Olze, & Ordemann, 2015). However, none of the studies found in our search included a direct measure of flavor perception (e.g. mainly the integration of taste with smell) in this population. (Graham, et al., 2014; Hancı, et al., 2016; Holinski, et al., 2015; Jurowich, et al., 2014; Makaronidis, et al., 2016; Zerrweck, et al., 2017; Zerrweck, et al., 2016)In addition, we will focus our review around changes in sweet taste/sweet foods, fat taste/fatty foods, and alcohol because most of the documented changes in taste function or ingestive behavior post-surgery are related to changes in these dietary items.
2. Methods
Articles were searched on PubMed and GoogleScholar and were restricted to peer-reviewed, English language, original research regarding flavor changes and food selection following bariatric surgery. Search terms included “bariatric surgery” OR “metabolic surgery” OR “weight loss surgery” OR “Roux en y gastric bypass” OR “Roux-en-y gastric bypass” OR “sleeve gastrectomy” OR “laparoscopic gastric banding” OR “rygb” OR “sg” OR “lagb” with “smell”, “cravings”, “food preference”, “taste change”, “flavor”, “taste perception”, “alcohol”, or “ethanol”. Articles were scanned by title and abstract and were excluded if they were 1) not relevant to the topic of interest (i.e. eating disorders, depression, etc.) or 2) a review. However, review reference tables were also searched for articles relevant to the topic. Additionally, any article that was relevant to the topic of interest but did not appear in the search or in reference tables was included. Articles published up to July 15, 2019 were considered for inclusion.
3. Results: Changes in Ingestive Behaviors
3.1. Changes in Food Selection via Indirect Measurement
Questionnaires remain the most popular method of evaluating changes in ingestive behavior following bariatric surgery due to their ease of administration and capability of being performed electronically. Early studies in the 1980’s regarding food-related shifts in bariatric populations used the questionnaire method and found that patients significantly decreased their food consumption specifically in the categories of calorically dense high-carbohydrates and fats after RYGB (Coughlin, Bell, Bivins, Wrobel, & Griffen, 1983; Halmi, Mason, Falk, & Stunkard, 1981). Since then, several studies have found decreased (or a trend for decreased) consumption of fats (Bavaresco, et al., 2010; Kruseman, Leimgruber, Zumbach, & Golay, 2010; Laurenius, et al., 2013; Molin Netto, et al., 2017), sweets (Kenler, Brolin, & Cody, 1990), or fats and sweets (Brolin, Robertson, Kenler, & Cody, 1994; Ernst, Thurnheer, Wilms, & Schultes, 2009; Ullrich, Ernst, Wilms, Thurnheer, & Schultes, 2013) following RYGB and SG (Coluzzi, et al., 2016; Sarwer, et al., 2017) in both adults and adolescents.
Interestingly, fat and sweet intake reported by adults who achieve and sustain optimal weight loss following RYGB or SG was similar to that reported by adults who did not achieve and sustain optimal weight loss (Amundsen, Strommen, & Martins, 2017; Chou, et al., 2017; da Silva, Gomes, & de Carvalho, 2016; Furtado, et al., 2018), but those with suboptimal weight loss were less physically active (Amundsen, et al., 2017) or consumed less healthy diets (da Silva, et al., 2016). Moreover, Furtado et al. found that subjects who achieved optimal weight loss reported consuming dessert more frequently than subjects with suboptimal weight loss (Furtado, et al., 2018). However, such a finding may be due to differential underreporting between groups. Findings from some studies suggest that individuals with obesity (Prentice, et al., 1986) and groups with suboptimal weight loss are more likely to underreport fatty food/dessert consumption than individuals without obesity or optimal weight loss (Bingham, et al., 1995; Pryer, Vrijheid, Nichols, Kiggins, & Elliott, 1997).
3.2. Changes in Food Selection via Direct Measurement
In order to simulate a more life-like situation for measuring food selection, a recent pair of studies evaluated ingestive behavior using a novel ad libitum buffet paradigm in which subjects are presented 20 food items and they are allowed to choose their dinner in an all-you-can-eat style. Categories for the food items offered were split into high-fat savory, low-fat savory, high-fat sweet, and low-fat sweet, and analyzed to determine if there were differences in intake after either RYGB or SG surgery. Interestingly, although subjects self-reported an increased preference for low-fat savory options when presented with a picture test before the meal, this preference was not reflected in the foods they chose at the buffet dinner (Nielsen, et al., 2017). Moreover, the only clinically relevant information from the buffet study was that subjects ate significantly less and needed less time to reach satiation and terminate the meal. These results were also replicated in their 2018 follow-up study that examined the same parameters in subjects 18 months post-surgery (Søndergaard Nielsen, et al., 2018), further highlighting the discrepancy between indirect vs. direct measures and the need for more direct measures of food selection.
The studies of Nielsen et al. 2017 and Nielsen et al. 2018 are important because they demonstrate that self-reported changes might not correlate with measured ingestive behaviors, and subjects might not alter food preferences after surgery but simply consume less of what they were eating before. However, every method has its limitations and the buffet paradigm is not an exemption. Firstly, a failure to reflect the preferences displayed during the picture test when evaluated in the buffet setting in the 2017 study may be due to the fact that the pictures used during the self-report test and the items offered at the buffet were not identical. Secondly, experimental conditions that preceded the ad libitum test may have affected its outcome. For example, the pre-loads (liquid meals) served before the buffet meal were mainly sweet, which could have attenuated the ability to detect differences in sweet food preferences before vs. after surgery because subjects could be reducing the amount of sweet food selected even before surgery due to sensory specific satiety (Rolls, Rolls, Rowe, & Sweeney, 1981).
3.3. Changes in Food Cravings via Indirect Measurement
In this review, we use the previously developed terminology of “an intense desire to consume a particular food (or food type) that is difficult to resist” to define food cravings (White, Whisenhunt, Williamson, Greenway, & Netemeyer, 2002). Food cravings appear to have profound effects on body weight. For example, individuals who have higher food craving traits display less control over weight loss (Meule, Lutz, Vögele, & Kübler, 2012) and decreases in craving traits are associated with increased weight loss (Batra, et al., 2013). Therefore, it seems important to examine changes in food cravings after bariatric surgery. Patients who seek bariatric surgery crave foods more frequently than healthy controls (Leahey, et al., 2012). Interestingly, the frequency of food cravings and, in particular, the frequency of cravings for sweets and fats is dramatically reduced after bariatric surgery induced weight loss in adult as well as adolescent subjects (Cushing, et al., 2015; Leahey, et al., 2012; Nance, Eagon, Klein, & Pepino, 2017; Pepino, Bradley, et al., 2014; Pepino, Stein, Eagon, & Klein, 2014; Sarwer, et al., 2017). However, the decreased frequency of food cravings might be related to changes in dietary intake and weight loss (Pepino, Bradley, et al., 2014; Sarwer, et al., 2017) and not to surgery-related changes in the gut (at least within the first year post-surgery). For example, weight loss induced by either LAGB or RYGB in adults (Pepino, Bradley, et al., 2014) or by RYGB, SG, or calorie restriction in adolescents (Sarwer, et al., 2017) similarly decreased the frequency of food cravings. Noteworthy, when “intensity” of food cravings rather than frequency of food cravings was used as a construct, a study that followed patients up to 7 years post-surgery showed better improvements in food cravings after RYGB than LAGB (Devlin, et al., 2018).
3.4. Changes in Alcohol Ingestion via Indirect Measurement
In striking contrast to the improvements in food-related ingestive behaviors detailed in the preceding subsections, a growing body of evidence indicates that RYGB and SG (although still very incipient) are associated with an increased risk to develop an alcohol use disorder (AUD) [RYGB: (Conason, et al., 2013; King, et al., 2017; King, et al., 2012; Suzuki, Haimovici, & Chang, 2012; Svensson, et al., 2013), SG: (Ibrahim, et al., 2018)].
Data from several studies suggest that alcohol consumption decreases during the first year post-surgery (Alfonsson, Sundbom, & Ghaderi, 2014; Burgos, et al., 2015; Coluzzi, Iossa, Spinetti, & Silecchia, 2018; Conason, et al., 2013; Svensson, et al., 2013; Woodard, Downey, Hernandez-Boussard, & Morton, 2011). Furthermore, 40–50% of subjects who had a high-risk alcohol use before surgery discontinued high-risk drinking within the first year after RYGB (Ivezaj, et al., 2017; King, et al., 2012; Wee, et al., 2014). However, this pattern of decreased alcohol ingestion is reversed over the second year after surgery (Conason, et al., 2013; Cuellar-Barboza, et al., 2015; King, et al., 2017; King, et al., 2012; Ostlund, et al., 2013; Wee, et al., 2014). Parallel to this increase in alcohol ingestion, there is an increase in the prevalence of AUD over the second year after RYGB but not after LAGB (King, et al., 2017; King, et al., 2012; Ostlund, et al., 2013). A recent prospective study suggests the prevalence of AUD following SG is similar to that after RYGB (Ibrahim, et al., 2018). The few studies that have evaluated participants past the 2-year mark found that the prevalence of AUD continued to increase significantly for many years after RYGB surgery (Backman, Stockeld, Rasmussen, Naslund, & Marsk, 2016; Cuellar-Barboza, et al., 2015; King, et al., 2017; Mitchell, et al., 2015; Svensson, et al., 2013). Remarkably, one in five patients with no history of alcohol problems within one year before surgery reported having symptoms of an AUD within 5 years post-RYGB (King, et al., 2017).
Recent studies provide insight into potential mechanisms that could explain the self-reported or screened increases in alcohol ingestion and the risk to develop an AUD after RYGB. First, the anatomical changes in the gut resulting from RYGB and SG surgical procedures dramatically affect alcohol pharmacokinetics, increasing alcohol absorption and reducing its first pass metabolism (i.e. the fraction of an ingested dose of a drug that is metabolized in its passage through the gut and liver before entering the systemic circulation). Therefore, after RYGB and SG, peak blood alcohol concentration happens faster (within 5–9 minutes after dinking) and peak blood alcohol concentrations are twice as high as those experienced when drinking the same amount of alcohol before surgery (Acevedo, et al., 2018; Klockhoff, Näslund, & Jones, 2002; Pepino, et al., 2015; Steffen, Engel, Pollert, Li, & Mitchell, 2013). The measured changes in alcohol pharmacokinetics are of importance because it is well known that rapid delivery of a psychotropic to the brain can increase its addictive properties (de Wit, Bodker, & Ambre, 1992). RYGB and SG convert alcohol ingestion to the blood profile of an alcohol IV administration, likely increasing the risk for AUD. Second, as mentioned in the introduction, some gut peptides that are involved in food intake are also important for alcohol reward [e.g. PYY (Thiele, Sparta, Hayes, & Fee, 2004), GLP-1 (Davis, et al., 2012), and ghrelin (Davis, et al., 2012; Hajnal, et al., 2012; Jerlhag, et al., 2009; Leggio, et al., 2014)] and can be modified by these surgeries (Madsbad, Dirksen, & Holst, 2014). For example, ghrelin, a well-recognized gut-brain orexigenic peptide, is required for alcohol reward (Jerlhag, et al., 2009). Recent data from animal models of obesity showed that rats that underwent RYGB worked harder than sham-operated controls to obtain alcohol, regardless of whether alcohol was administered orally (Hajnal, et al., 2012; Thanos, et al., 2015) or intravenously (Polston, et al., 2013), and that the increased rewarding value of alcohol after RYGB surgery was, at least in part, mediated by increased sensitivity of brain ghrelin receptors (Hajnal, et al., 2012).
4. Results: Changes in Taste Function
4.1. Indirect Measurements
4.1.1. Sensory-Discriminative Component
Findings from studies that examine changes in taste perception using questionnaires are discrepant. Using a custom made survey titled the Taste Change Survey, subjects reported that sweet taste intensity was increased after undergoing SG (Zerrweck, et al., 2016) but responses were highly variable with both increased (Graham, et al., 2014) and decreased (Tichansky, Boughter, & Madan, 2006) sweet taste sensitivities after undergoing RYGB. Furthermore, using this same questionnaire, subjects post-LAGB reported perceiving sweet taste as more intense than subjects post-RYGB (Tichansky, et al., 2006). However, studies using different self-report questionnaires found that subjects post-SG did not experience changes in sweet taste intensity (Tassinari, et al., 2017).
Subjects reported that fatty foods tasted differently or more intense within one year following RYGB and SG (Van Vuuren, Strodl, White, & Lockie, 2017; Zerrweck, et al., 2016); however, these effects began to diverge based on surgery type when examined more than two years out from surgery; while subjects who underwent RYGB retained these perceived changes (Graham, et al., 2014), those who underwent SG no longer perceived any changes to fat taste (Tassinari, et al., 2017). As there is still severely minimal data on both ingestive behaviors and taste function long term post-surgery, these findings pose a critical point as to why more studies are needed that examine patients beyond the first year post-surgery, as it is entirely possible changes observed within the short term do not last in the long term.
4.1.2. Hedonic Component
Subjects post-RYGB and SG largely report decreased preference and/or liking for sweets (Ammon, et al., 2015; Coluzzi, et al., 2016; Gero, et al., 2017; Zoon, et al., 2018) and fats (Ammon, et al., 2015; Coluzzi, et al., 2016; Faulconbridge, et al., 2016; Gero, et al., 2017; Husted & Ogden, 2014; Thomas & Marcus, 2008; Zoon, et al., 2018). Subjects who underwent SG also reported that they no longer have a desire to consume sweet and fatty foods following their surgeries (Van Vuuren, et al., 2017). It is possible, though, that these changes might wash out after one year post-surgery (Coluzzi, et al., 2016; Kittrell, et al., 2018).
4.2. Direct Measurements
4.2.1. Sensory-Discriminative Component
Typical direct measurements of the sensory-discriminative domain of taste perception include the evaluation of taste quality (i.e. sweet, salty, bitter, sour, umami) and taste sensitivity. Most of the sensory studies in the bariatric population have measured detection thresholds (the minimum concentration a subjects needs to identify a taste stimulus as different from water) or recognition thresholds (the minimum concentration a subject needs to recognize the taste quality of the stimuli) (Bartoshuk, 1978). The literature remains divided on whether or not sweet sensitivity measured at threshold levels is changed after RYGB or SG. Research has indicated both increased sweet taste sensitivity (i.e. decreased sucrose detection and recognition thresholds) (Bueter, et al., 2011; Burge, Schaumburg, Choban, DiSilvestro, & Flancbaum, 1995) or no change in taste sensitivity (Nance, et al., 2017; Pepino, Bradley, et al., 2014; Scruggs, Buffington, & Cowan, 1994) in studies that are relatively comparable in gender distribution and time since surgery. The only difference was in methodology used. It is well established in psychophysics that, in general, changes in a given stimulus concentration do not result in linear changes in its perceived intensity. In particular, taste sensitivity at detection thresholds does not generally correlate with perception of taste intensity of the same taste stimulus at suprathreshold concentrations (which are concentrations more closely related with our food experiences) (Bartoshuk, 1978; Keast & Roper, 2007; Pepino, Finkbeiner, Beauchamp, & Mennella, 2010). Although taste detection thresholds relate fairly well to manipulations of the gustatory system in preclinical models (e.g. see Mathes in this issue), the clinical relevance of surgery-related changes in taste thresholds in people is unclear at this time.
Taste strips can also be used to assess taste sensitivity, and are an alternative measurement to dissolved taste stimuli in water. Strips impregnated with various concentrations of basic taste stimuli (sucrose for sweet, citric acid for sour, sodium chloride for salty, and quinine for bitter) are placed on the tongue and subjects are asked to suck on the strips and correctly identify the taste (Mueller, et al., 2003). Studies both post-RYGB (Holinski, et al., 2015) and post-SG (Altun, et al., 2016) showed overall increased sensitivity to sucrose strips after surgery (i.e. after surgery subjects were able to discriminate more strips correctly). In the study of Altun and collaborators, it is unclear if improvements in taste identification were due to SG-related decreases in body weight or mainly due to learning effects (i.e. becoming more familiar and better at identifying the taste strips with repeated testing) because their study design included a longitudinal a group of people evaluated before and several times after undergoing SG only. However, Holinski et al. found that obese subjects had lower taste strip scores when compared to normal weight controls, and that only those evaluated after RYGB or SG become better at identifying taste strips such that, after surgery, scores were not significantly different from normal weight controls (Holinski, et al., 2015). However, taste strips as a sensory testing method have some limitations. Firstly, as taste stimuli need to be solubilized in order for the taste bud to sense them (Chaudhari & Roper, 2010), changes in saliva content could affect the results of the taste strip scores. Secondly, the correct identification of a taste is still uninformative about changes in perceived intensities.
The few studies that have measured perceived intensity of basic taste stimuli found that taste perception was relatively unchanged following bariatric surgery induced weight loss (Nance, et al., 2017; Pepino, Bradley, et al., 2014). Although the perceived intensity of sucrose was slightly reduced after weight loss induced by RYGB and LAGB, there was no association between these surgeries and changes to the perceived intensity of the sweetness of glucose, saltiness of NaCl, or savoriness of monosodium glutamate (MSG, the prototypical stimuli for umami taste) (Pepino, Bradley, et al., 2014). Additionally, there were no changes to perceived intensity of sucrose, glucose, NaCl, or MSG within the first year after RYGB or SG (Nance, et al., 2017). These findings suggest that reported changes in sweet intake after surgery are unlikely to be explained by changes in perceived intensity of sweetness.
4.2.2. Hedonic Component
Using forced-choice preference tests, studies found decreased (or a trend for decreased) sucrose preferences following weight loss induced by RYGB, SG, and LAGB (Nance, et al., 2017; Pepino, Bradley, et al., 2014). Additionally, recent studies suggest that SG also imparts beneficial shifts to sweet liking that LAGB does not. Using a 10-sample habituation paradigm to 24% w/v sucrose, pre-bariatric subjects rated the samples as mainly pleasant. However, after receiving RYGB or SG, subjects found the 24% sucrose mainly unpleasant (Nance, et al., 2017). The observation that subjects post-LAGB still found the samples as pleasant as they did before surgery (Pepino, Bradley, et al., 2014) suggests that changes in the hedonic value of sweetness are not explained solely by decreased body weight or diet-related changes. Convergent with these findings of a shift in the hedonic value of sweetness after weight loss induced by either RYGB or SG, it has been shown that, following RYGB in adults (Miras, et al., 2012) and SG in adolescents (Abdeen, Miras, Alqahtani, & le Roux, 2019), patients reduced their willingness to work for a sweet candy reward (a measure of “wanting”) in a progressive ratio paradigm. It is possible that these shifts in the hedonic value of sweetness are due to nutritional counseling received by patients both before and after surgery. However, the fact that patients from different surgical procedures all receive similar nutritional counseling, but only RYGB and SG (and not LAGB) show a decrease in the hedonic value of sweetness suggest that such a possibility is unlikely
5. Applied Implications and Future Directions
The major implication of this review is that studies using direct vs. indirect measures to assess taste function and ingestive behavior following bariatric surgery are severely discrepant. This is likely due to the fact that peripheral taste function is not altered by the surgeries or by surgery-induced weight loss, and that other mechanisms are governing these reported changes. One popular hypothesis is that these surgeries instead alter central processes of reward, which could then lead to altered hedonic responses to food. Researchers have demonstrated higher opioid receptor availability (Karlsson, et al., 2016), decreased brain reward activation to high-calorie food pictures (Scholtz, et al., 2014), and altered dopamine D2R receptor availability (Dunn, et al., 2010; Steele, et al., 2010) after RYGB and/or SG. If patients are now experiencing a significantly altered reward sensation when eating the same type of food as they were eating before surgery, it is possible that, through post-ingestive feedback, they mistake the altered reward as though food now tastes off (e.g. “sweeter” or “fattier”). Following this notion, it is possible that the same mechanisms purported to explain the increase in AUD following surgery (i.e. rapid absorption processes and altered gut peptides) are also responsible for reported “taste” changes. As discussed in subsection 3.4, the alteration of gut anatomy after RYGB or SG causes a near instantaneous and much increased peak blood alcohol concentration. Similar to the rapid delivery of alcohol after RYGB/SG, the ingestion of a meal after these procedures results in a rapid delivery of glucose to the systemic circulation, which triggers a faster and bigger spike in blood insulin and other hormones (Bradley, et al., 2012; Bradley, et al., 2014) that affect food reward. Therefore, it is possible that these profound changes in the metabolic responses to a meal following RYGB/SG heighten sensory specific satiety and rapidly shift patients’ hedonic responses to food stimulus.
It is imperative that the mechanisms underlying the effectiveness (as well as mechanisms that lead to the detriments) of bariatric procedures are elucidated as they could provide important clinical implications for successful weight loss and quality of life following surgery. Specifically, once the specific mechanism as to why surgeries like RYGB and SG are as effective as they are is discovered, it would be of importance for studies to examine the mechanism long-term from surgery and how this might correlate to successful vs. unsuccessful weight loss, diet choice, eating behaviors, and more. Therefore, once both the mechanism and how it functions over time are more fully studied, clinicians could use this information to educate patients on how their surgery is going to confer weight loss and remission of comorbidities, and what they must do on their part in order to ensure maximal aid over time. On the other hand, it is also important for mechanisms and warning signs for the detriments of the surgeries, like increased risk of developing an AUD, are made clear as well. Therefore, if studies could determine criteria that could categorize individuals as high-risk even before receiving surgeries, clinicians could possibly have a better grasp on educational material for those receiving the surgery and even criteria for who would or would not make a good candidate for different bariatric procedures.
Future study designs should focus on including long-term measures as data long-term post-surgery is severely lacking in the current literature. Studies should also focus on examining potential changes in flavor perception (i.e. integrate measures of taste with retronasal and orthonasal smell), as it is widely agreed upon that changes in peripheral taste alone are likely not the mechanism for subjects’ reported “taste” changes. Additionally, it would be interesting to see more sensory studies integrate changes in gut anatomy and gut hormones (Karamanakos, Vagenas, Kalfarentzos, & Alexandrides, 2008; Korner, et al., 2009; le Roux, et al., 2006; Lee, et al., 2011; Peterli, et al., 2009) with documented changes in brain reward (Dunn, et al., 2010; Karlsson, et al., 2016; Scholtz, et al., 2014; Steele, et al., 2010) in future studies.
6. Conclusions
Questionnaire data indicates distinct self-reported changes in taste associated with decreased consumption of sweets and fats following bariatric surgery. However, these reported “taste” changes are not evident when carefully examined by validated sensory methods and real-life emulation studies. When taken together, these studies suggest that the taste changes perceived after bariatric surgery lie outside the realm of peripheral taste function and more within the realm of changes in central processes in taste that involve the hedonic and rewarding value of food, which can impact food consumption. That RYGB, and likely SG, are associated with an increased risk to develop an AUD further supports the notion that these surgeries alter central circuits of reward that are critical in the regulation of ingestive behavior.
Table 1:
CATEGORY | STUDY | POPULATION | SURGERY TYPE | TIME SINCE SURGERY | METHOD | FINDINGS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fats | Amundsen et al., 2017 | 42 female 7 male |
RYGB | >1 YR (WEIGHT REGAIN VS WEIGHT LOSS) | Food Frequency Questionnaire | No difference in fat intake between suboptimal vs acceptable weight loss |
Fats | Bavaresco et al., 2010 | 41 female 7 male |
RYGB | PRE, 1, 3, 6, 8, 12 MO | 24 hour dietary recall + NUTWIN-UNIFESP software | ↓ fat intake at all times tested |
Fats | Brolin et al., 1994 | 117 female 21 male |
RYGB, Vertical Banded Gastroplasty | PRE, 6, 12, 18, 24, 36 MO | Verbal report intake + nutrition modeling software | ↓ fat intake at 6 & 36 MO |
Fats | Chou et al., 2017 | 30 female 10 male |
SG | 5 YR | Food Frequency Questionnaire | No relationship between fat intake and weight loss |
Fats | Coluzzi et al., 2016 | 22 female 8 male |
SG | PRE, 6, 12, 24 MO | Modified Suter Questionnaire | ↓ interest in fats at 6, 12, and 24 MO |
Fats | Coughlin et al., 1983 | 21 female 4 male |
RYGB | PRE, 1, 3, 6, 12 MO | Dietary recall & checklist | ↓ fat intake before reaching a plateau at 6 MO |
Fats | Da Silva et al., 2016 | 71 female 9 male (61 weight stable vs. 19 weight regain) |
RYGB | 42 MO | Healthy Eating Index | No difference of fat intake between weight regain vs. weight stable subjects |
Fats | Furtado et al., 2018 | 88 female 17 male (64 success vs. 41 failure) |
RYGB | 48–56 MO | 24 hour dietary recall + Avanutri software | No difference in fat intake between weight loss failure vs. success groups |
Fats | Halmi et al., 1981 | 70 female 10 male |
RYGB | PRE, 6, 12, 24 MO | Structured interview | ↓ fat intake |
Fats | Kenler et al., 1990 | 81 female 23 male |
RYGB, Horizontal Gastroplasty | PRE, 6 MO INTERVALS UP TO 24 MO | Verbal report intake + nutrition modeling software | ↔ fat intake |
Fats | Kruseman et al., 2010 | 80 female 0 male |
RYGB | PRE, 8 YR | 4 day dietary intake record | ↓ fat intake (trend) |
Fats | Laurenius et al., 2013 | 31 female 12 male |
RYGB | PRE, 6 W, 6 MO, 2 YR | Swedish Obese Subjects Questionnaire | ↓ fat intake at all times fisted |
Fats | Molin Netto et al., 2017 | 39 female 2 male |
RYGB | PRE, 6 MO | Food Frequency Questionnaire | ↓ fat intake |
Fats | Sarwer et al., 2017 | 219 female 69 male (adolescent) |
RYGB, SG | PRE, 6, 12, 24 MO | Minnesota Nutrition Data System | ↓ fat intake |
Sweets | Amundsen et al., 2017 | 42 female 7 male |
RYGB | >1 YR (WEIGHT REGAIN VS WEIGHT LOSS) | Food Frequency Questionnaire | No difference added sugar intake between suboptimal vs. acceptable weight loss |
Sweets | Brolin et al., 1994 | 117 female 21 male |
RYGB, Vertical Banded Gastroplasty | PRE, 6, 12, 18, 24, 36 MO | Verbal report intake + nutrition modeling software | ↓ sweet intake at 6, 12, 18, & 24 MO |
Sweets | Coluzzi et al., 2016 | 22 female 8 male |
SG | PRE, 6, 12, 24 MO | Modified Suter Questionnaire | ↓ interest in sweets at 6, 12, and 24 MO |
Sweets | Da Silva et al., 2016 | 71 female 9 male (61 weight stable vs. 19 weight regain) |
RYGB | 42 MO | Healthy Eating Index | No difference of sweet intake between weight regain vs. weight stable subjects |
Sweets | Ernst et al., 2009 | 165 female 46 male |
RYGB, LAGB | >/= 1 YR | Food Frequency Questionnaire | ↓ consumption of fatty sweets (desserts) post-RYGB |
Sweets | Furtado et al., 2018 | 88 female 17 male (64 success vs. 41 failure) |
RYGB | 48–56 MO | 24 hour dietary recall + Avanutri software | ↑ dessert intake in weight loss success group |
Sweets | Kenler et al., 1990 | 81 female 23 male |
RYGB, Horizontal Gastroplasty | PRE, 6 MO INTERVALS UP TO 24 MO | Verbal report intake + nutrition modeling software | ↓ decreased sweet intake |
Sweets | Ullrich et al., 2013 | 44 patients | RYGB | PRE, ~16 MO | Power of Food Scale, Food Frequency Questionnaire | ↓ consumption fatty sweets (desserts) |
Table 2:
CATEGORY | STUDY | POPULATION | SURGERY TYPE | TIME SINCE SURGERY | METHOD | FINDINGS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fats & Sweets | Cushing et al., 2015 | 10 female 6 male (adolescents) |
RYGB | PRE, 3, 6, 12, 18, 24 MO | Food Craving Inventory |
↓ sweet cravings ↓ fast food fat cravings ↓ high-fat cravings |
n/a | Devlin et al., 2018 | 156 female 28 male |
RYGB, LAGB | PRE, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 YR | Custom questions | ↓ Intensity of cravings after RYGB |
Fats & Sweets | Leahey et al., 2012 | 46 female 6 male |
RYGB, LAGB | PRE, 3, 6 MO | Food Craving Inventory |
↓ sweet cravings ↓ fast-food fats cravings ↔ high fats cravings |
Fats & Sweets | Nance et al., 2017 | 27 female 8 male |
RYGB, SG | PRE, <1 YR | Food Craving Inventory |
↓ sweet cravings ↓ fast food fat cravings ↓ high-fat cravings |
Fats & Sweets | Pepino et al., 2014 | 27 female 0 male |
RYGB, LAGB | PRE, <1 YR | Food Craving Inventory |
↓ sweet cravings ↓ fast-food fats cravings ↔ high fats cravings |
Fats & Sweets | Pepino et al., 2014 | 39 female 6 male |
RYGB, LAGB, SG | PRE, <1 YR | Food Craving Inventory |
↓ sweet cravings ↓ fast food fat cravings ↓ high-fat cravings |
Fats & Sweets | Sarwer et al., 2017 | 219 female 69 male (adolescent) |
Bariatric surgery (RYGB/SG) vs. lifestyle modification | PRE, 6, 12, 24 MO | Food Craving Inventory |
↓ sweet cravings ↓ fast food fat cravings ↓ high-fat cravings |
Table 3:
CATEGORY | STUDY | POPULATION | SURGERY TYPE | TIME SINCE SURGERY | METHOD | FINDINGS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sensory Discriminatory | Graham et al., 2014 | 89 female 14 male |
RYGB | 25 MO | Taste Change Survey | ↑ sugary taste of sweets foods |
Sensory Discriminatory | Tassinari et al., 2017 | 37 female 13 male |
SG | PRE, >24 MO | EPIC Food Frequency Questionnaire | ↔ sweet or fat taste intensity |
Sensory Discriminatory | Tichansky et al., 2006 | 110 patients | RYGB, LAGB | > 1 MO | Taste Change Survey | ↓ sweet taste sensitivity |
Sensory Discriminatory | Van Vuuren et al., 2017 | 86 female 20 male |
SG | 4–6 W, 6–8 MO | Taste Desire and Enjoyment Change Questionnaire | ↑ sweet and fat taste sensitivity |
Sensory Discriminatory | Zerrweck et al., 2016 | 119 female 64 male |
RYGB, SG | 10 MO | Taste Change Survey | Change of taste in fatty foods ↑ sweet taste sensitivity |
Hedonics | Ammon et al., 2015 | 14 female 1 male |
SG | PRE, 6 W | Food Preference Questionnaire |
↓ hedonic ratings for sweet and fatty foods ↓ preference for fats |
Hedonics | Coluzzi et al., 2016 | 22 female 8 male |
SG | PRE, 6, 12, 24 MO | Modified Suter Questionnaire |
↓ preference for sweets that might wash out over time ↓ preference for fats |
Hedonics | Faulconbridge et al., 2016 | 59 female 0 male |
RYGB, SG | PRE, 6 MO | Food Images Test | ↓ liking for high-fat foods |
Hedonics | Gero et al, 2017 | 77 female 23 men |
SG | PRE, 6 D, 6 MO | Visual Analogue Scale Questionnaire | ↓ sweet and fat preferences at both post-surgery time points |
Hedonics | Husted et al., 2014 | 83 female 8 male |
RYGB, LAGB, Duodenal Switch, Other | PRE, 3 MO | Written and visual food-type preferences | ↓ liking for high-fat foods |
Hedonics | Kittrell et al., 2018 | 155 female 27 male |
RYGB | <12 MO, >12 MO | Self-Assessment Manikin | ↓ sweet and fat preferences within 1 year that may attenuate further out from surgery |
Hedonics | Thomas et al., 2008 | 29 female 9 male |
RYGB | 3–29 MO | Food Frequency Questionnaire | ↓ fat preferences |
Hedonics | Van Vuuren et al.,2017 | 86 female 20 male |
SG | 4–6 W, 6–8 MO | Taste Desire and Enjoyment Change Questionnaire | ↓ desire to consume sweet and fatty foods |
Hedonics | Zoon et al., 2018 | 15 female 4 male |
RYGB | PRE, 2 MO | Macronutrient and Taste Preference Ranking Test | ↓ sweet and fat preferences |
Table 4:
CATEGORY | STUDY | POPULATION | SURGERY TYPE | TIME SINCE SURGERY | METHOD | FINDINGS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sensory Discriminatory | Altun et al., 2018 | 30 female 22 male |
SG | PRE, 1 MO, 3 MO | Taste Strips | ↑ sweet taste sensitivity |
Sensory Discriminatory | Bueter et al., 2011 | 15 female 3 male |
RYGB | PRE, 2 MO | Sucrose Detection Thresholds | ↑ sweet taste sensitivity |
Sensory Discriminatory | Burge et al., 1995 | 8 women 6 men |
RYGB | PRE, 6 W, 12 W | Recognition Thresholds | ↑ sweet taste sensitivity |
Sensory Discriminatory | Holinski et al., 2015 | 44 female 23 male |
RYGB, SG, LAGB | PRE, 2 W, 3 MO, 6 MO | Taste Strips | ↑ sweet taste sensitivity |
Sensory Discriminatory | Nance et al., 2017 | 27 female 8 male |
RYGB, SG | PRE, <1 YR | Detection Thresholds, Suprathreshold Intensities |
↔ in sucrose detection thresholds ↔ in sucrose suprathreshold intensities ↔ in glucose suprathreshold intensities |
Sensory Discriminatory | Pepino et al., 2014 | 27 female 0 male |
RYGB, LAGB | PRE, <1 YR | Detection Thresholds, Suprathreshold Intensities |
↔ in sucrose detection thresholds ↓ sucrose suprathreshold intensities ↔ glucose suprathreshold intensities |
Sensory Discriminatory | Scruggs et al., 1994 | 16 female 0 male |
RYGB | PRE, 30, 60, 90 D | Detection and Recognition Thresholds | ↔ in sucrose detection or recognition thresholds |
Hedonics | Abdeen et al. 2019 | 16 patients (adolescent) |
SG | PRE, 12 W, 52 W | Progressive Ratio Task | ↓ “wanting” of a sweet/fat candy reward |
Hedonics | Miras et al., 2012 | 12 female 9 male |
RYGB | PRE, 8 W | Progressive Ratio Task | ↓ “wanting” of a sweet/fat candy reward |
Hedonics | Nance et al., 2017 | 27 female 8 male |
RYGB, SG | PRE, <1 YR | Sucrose Preferences, Sucrose Habituation |
↓ sucrose preferences (trend) ↓ sucrose liking |
Hedonics | Pepino et al., 2014 | 27 female 0 male |
RYGB, LAGB | PRE, <1 YR | Sucrose Preferences, Sucrose Habituation |
↓ sucrose preferences ↓ sucrose liking only in RYGB |
Source of Funding
This work was supported in part by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism under Award Number R01-AA024103 and USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture Hatch Project number 698-921. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
Footnotes
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Conflict of Interest
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