Taste and olfactory status in a gourmand with a right amygdala lesion
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Gallo Torre, Milagros; Gámiz Ruiz, Fernando; Pérez García, Miguel; García Del Moral Garrido, Raimundo; Rolls, Edmund T.Editorial
Taylor and Francis
Materia
Anterior temporal lobe Amygdala Disgust Gourmand syndrome Olfaction Taste
Date
2014-05-13Patrocinador
This work was supported by the research projects HUM 02763 (Junta de Andalucia, Spain) and PSIC2011-23702 (MINECO, Spain).Résumé
In a patient with a lesion of the right amygdala and temporal pole who had the characteristics of the gourmand syndrome, sensory and hedonic testing was performed to examine the processing of taste, olfactory, and some emotional stimuli. The gourmand syndrome describes a preoccupation with food and a preference for fine eating and is associated with right anterior lesions. It was found that the taste thresholds for sweet, salt, bitter, and sour were normal; that the patient did not dislike the taste of salt (NaCl) at low and moderate concentrations as much as age-matched controls; that this also occurred for monosodium glutamate (MSG); that there were some olfactory differences from normal controls; and that there was a marked reduction in the ability to detect face expressions of disgust.