Otago Daily Times

Link between smell and obesity: study

- JAMIE MORTON

NEW Zealand scientists have revealed a link between obesity and scent, finding that the better a person can smell, the more likely they are to be slim.

Leadauthor of the study, Dr Mei Peng, from the University of Otago’s department of food science, says the link between smell and people’s bodyshape was previously a relatively unknown area of scientific study and knowledge.

‘‘After compiling our evidence we found there is in fact a strong link between a person’s body weight and their smell ability,’’ Dr Peng said.

Of the five senses, Dr Peng considered smell to be the least understood, but at the same time noted it was perhaps the most important sense for influencin­g eating behaviour through detecting and discrimina­ting between different flavours.

‘‘We found obese people’s ability to detect and discrimina­te smell was not as efficient as slim people,’’ she said.

‘‘This can result in obese people having a higher chance of making poor food choices because they will need other forms of stimulatio­n to enjoy food.

‘‘For example they might choose, or be more attracted to, saltier and tastier foods such as bacon and maple syrup instead of blander foods such as lowfat cereal with less sugar.’’

Of note was that body weight had to pass a certain benchmark for the link to become obvious so the reduction in ability to detect and discrimina­te between different smells was greater among people who were closer to being obese.

The researcher­s hypothesis­ed that once a person was obese, their metabolism altered several peptides and hormones which had an impact on the gutbrain signalling pathway.

This leads to another area of considerat­ion about two surgical obesity treatments: stomach removal and gastric bypass.

The research found stomach removal could actually improve smell ability, whereas other obesity surgeries do not have the same effect on people’s smell ability.

‘‘Cutting the stomach could change nerves in the stomach that affect the gutbrain pathway, so smell changes could be the key to the difference between the two surgeries. Essentiall­y, the smaller size of the stomach might not be the factor that leads to weight loss, it is more likely due to the gutbrain pathway being reset.’’

The study, conducted this year, involved a systematic review and drew on data of 1432 individual­s from empirical and clinical worldwide studies.

The research was supported by a Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden FastStart grant.

Dr Peng hoped to continue the line of research to investigat­e the rewardfact­or smell had in various bodyshape groups. — NZME

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