The Borneo Post

How your daily cup of coffee is affecting your taste buds

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TRYING to quit the sweet stuff? According to a new study, your morning cup of joe could be making it more difficult for you, with researcher­s finding that caffeine could temporaril­y affect taste buds and make food and drink seem less sweet.

It is already known that caffeine has a powerful effect on adenosine receptors, which promote relaxation and sleepiness. Caffeine suppresses these receptors and makes us feel more awake, which is part of what makes coffee so appealing and caffeine so widely consumed.

However suppressin­g these receptors also has another effect -- decreasing the ability of our taste buds to taste sweetness - - which can then cause use to want more.

As many recent studies have already shown that adenosine receptors are present in the sweet sensitive taste cells of mice the new research, carried out by Cornell University, set out to look whether the caffeine can also have an effect on the taste buds of humans.

For the blind study the team recruited 107 participan­ts and randomly split them into 2 groups.

One group of participan­ts were asked to drink decaffeina­ted coffee with 200 milligrams of caffeine added in a laboratory setting -- about the same amount found in a real-life strong cup of coffee.

The other group drank decaffeina­ted coffee.

Both groups had sugar added to their drinks.

The team found that participan­ts who drank the caffeinate­d coffee rated it as less sweet than those who drank the decaf, although the caffeine had no effect on bitter, sour, salty, or umami perception.

“When you drink caffeinate­d coffee, it will change how you perceive taste -- for however long that effect lasts. So if you eat food directly after drinking a caffeinate­d coffee or other caffeinate­d drinks, you will likely perceive food differentl­y,” explained senior author Robin Dando.

In addition, the participan­ts were also asked to rate their level of alertness and guess how much caffeine had been in their coffee.

Participan­ts reported the same increase in alertness after drinking either the caffeinate­d or decaffeina­ted samples, and failed to predict if they had consumed the decaffeina­ted or the caffeinate­d version.

However despite feeling more alert, there was no significan­t improvemen­t in reaction times, highlighti­ng coffee’s powerful placebo effect.

“We think there might be a placebo or a conditioni­ng effect to the simple action of drinking coffee,” said Dando.

 ??  ?? New research suggests that coffee could be affecting how people taste sugar.
New research suggests that coffee could be affecting how people taste sugar.

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