Can Zapping Tastebuds Lower Salt Intake?
Highlights:
- Zapping tastebuds can help reduce the consumption of salt by 30%
- Cutting down on salt intake can prevent 2.5 million deaths every year globally
- Electric chopsticks can stimulate the taste of salt in food by tricking the tongue
- Low-sodium diet reduces the risk of developing high blood pressure and heart disease
Low-sodium dieters can really enjoy the taste of food, as electric chopsticks make the food tastier, reveals a new study.
Most people consume too much salt in their diet, leading to high blood pressure and other health issues. Researchers have discovered a novel way to enhance low-sodium food's saltiness and even potential savor, using electrical stimulation of the tongue through a chopstick-shaped device. The concept has applications in other fields, such as stimulating taste as part of a virtual reality experience.
‘Electric stimulation enhances the saltiness of the low-sodium diet by 40% or more and gives you a better mouthfeel and taste.’
An estimated 2.5m deaths each year could be prevented globally if individuals cut back their salt consumption to the recommended daily intake of less than five grams, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
Japanese researchers may have found a healthier way for people to enjoy the full flavor of salty foods while still adhering to a low-sodium diet.
Scientists at Meiji University and Kirin, a Japanese food and beverage company, have developed a chopstick-like device that uses a weak electrical charge to stimulate how the tongue experiences saltiness. The research is published in the journal Frontiers in Virtual Reality.
Previous studies have described how introducing a weak electrical current to the tongue can affect the charged ions that make sodium chloride inhibit or enhance saltiness and other taste sensations. The new paper is the first to investigate how individuals following a low-sodium diet can use electric taste stimulation to reduce salt intake.
"Many people consume around twice the salt intake standard recommended by the WHO," said lead author Yoshinobu Kaji, a master's student in the Graduate School of Advanced Mathematical Sciences at Meiji University.
"This standard cannot be met with a little effort in salt reduction, and a drastic solution is essential. This study is an important approach because it suggests that a 30% reduction in salt can be achieved by electrical stimulation."
Electrified chopsticks
Kaji and his colleagues - Homei Miyashita, a Department of Frontier Media Science professor in Meiji University's School of Interdisciplinary Mathematical Sciences, and Ai Sato with Kirin - first designed an electrical stimulation waveform with an amplitude and frequency optimized to enhance low-sodium foods. They gently zapped their taste buds before testing the effects of the electrified chopsticks in an experiment involving 31 people previously or currently on a low-sodium diet.Each person tasted and rated the saltiness of several saltwater gel samples with two different saltiness levels.
The results showed that electric stimulation enhanced the saltiness of the low-sodium sample, making it comparable to the control sample, which was 40% more or saltier. In other words, electrified chopsticks or other utensils could reduce salt intake by 30% without sacrificing saltiness. More than 80% of subjects said they could tolerate the electric stimulation daily.
In a second qualitative experiment, the participants consumed a low-sodium miso soup, which many found had a better mouthfeel and taste, suggesting that electric taste stimulation may also affect umami, according to the paper.
Umami is a fifth sensory taste that is translated as �savory'.
From diet to virtual reality
According to Kaji, the long-term goal is to develop a commercially available chopstick-shaped device for daily use by those following a low-sodium diet or trying to reduce their salt intake. Most people consume about twice the recommended level, meaning a utensil could help reduce health conditions like high blood pressure.In addition, the researchers at Miyashita's lab at Meiji University are investigating applications in other fields, such as stimulating taste as part of a virtual reality experience.
"In the future, for example, it may be possible to reproduce the taste of food and drink virtually, or to realize taste expressions that are difficult to achieve with conventional eating experiences," Kaji said.
Source: Eurekalert
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