The
Nose Knows
By Kate Jackson
Vol. 6 No. 1 p. 34
The answer to the obesity epidemic in the United
States, suggests neurobiologist and psychiatrist Alan Hirsch, MD,
may be right under our noses. While billions of research dollars
are earmarked for studies that attempt to pinpoint the causes of
weight gain and devise strategies with which to combat it, Hirsch
believes that we have much to learn—and many pounds to lose—by
following our noses.
When it comes to exploring the reasons individuals
overeat and investigating the methods by which they can lose weight,
researchers at the Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation,
Ltd., in Chicago believe that the nose is overlooked or underappreciated.
Giving the nose its due, Hirsch, who heads the foundation, has been
exploring the use of aromas and flavor intensifiers as tools that
can help individuals lose weight without dieting. Instead of restricting
certain foods or imposing limitations on the quantity of foods,
his approach focuses on enhancing the smell and taste of food, which,
his studies indicate, alters perceptions of satiety.
The foundation’s work is based upon the fundamental
knowledge that the regulation of weight is influenced by hunger
and satiety and the perception of hunger and satiety is modulated
by emotional, physiological, and environmental stimuli. The sense
of smell is both a physical and environmental stimuli, and associated
with the limbic system, it is inextricably linked to emotion. Support
for the notion that aroma influences feelings of fullness is found,
says Hirsch, in the anatomic link between the ventromedial nucleus
of the hypothalamus, which controls satiety, and the olfactory bulb.
Also present as a neurotransmitter in the olfactory bulb, he observes,
is cholecystokinin, a factor in gastric satiety. Additional credence
to the belief in an olfactory-satiety feedback mechanism, he suggests,
is lent by the fact that weight gain often occurs in individuals
with severely faulty olfaction.
More than anything else, it was his awareness of
the link between weight gain and a diminished sense of smell that
led Hirsch on the path toward investigating the nose’s role
in weight regulation. His clinical work as a neurologist and psychiatrist
involved treating individuals whose sense of smell was impaired
by illness, head trauma, or the use of medications. He noticed that
many of these patients gained weight when their sense of taste was
disrupted. In the preface to his book, Scentsational Weight Loss,
he comments, “It’s as if they overate in an attempt
to regain some of the pleasure from eating that had been lost along
with the sense of smell. Since 90% of taste is really smell, if
we can't smell food, we don’t taste it. So, these people were
consuming more food but most certainly enjoying it less. It’s
difficult, if not impossible, to enjoy food that has no taste.”
Hirsch continues in his book, “Assuming that
the mechanism is working well, the brain can correlate the amount
of food that you have taken into your mouth with the amount of odor
that has reached the nose. In other words, the satiety center uses
the odor molecules to operate its signals of ‘You’ve
eaten enough, you are satisfied now.’ The message might actually
be, ‘I’ve smelled it, therefore I’ve eaten it.’”
Hirsch’s initial studies focused on the role
of olfaction in weight loss. He recruited 3,193 volunteers to test
the premise that inhaling certain odors would facilitate weight
loss in overweight individuals. Volunteers were required to be between
the ages of 18 and 64, at least 10 pounds overweight, and could
not be asthmatic, breast-feeding, pregnant, or planning to become
pregnant during the six-month study. Participants were instructed
to eat normally and exercise according to their habit. They were
provided with inhalers containing aromatic blends and told to inhale
in each nostril three times whenever they became hungry, which ranged
from three to 48 times per day. Each month, the subjects were given
new inhalers with different flavors, including peppermint, green
apple, and banana.
Hirsch indicates, “Those subjects whose test
scores showed that they had normal olfactory abilities and who used
their inhalers frequently, ate two to four meals a day, felt bad
about overeating, but did not feel bad about themselves lost nearly
five pounds or 2% of body weight per month.” The study, published
in the Journal of Neurological and Orthopaedic Medicine and Surgery
in 1995, underscored that the frequency of inhaler use correlated
directly to the amount of weight lost. Individuals with strong olfactory
ability—those who were able to recognize the odorant in the
inhalers—tended to lose more weight, with an average weight
loss of 4.7 pounds per month. The aromatic blends are generally
considered to be safe for most individuals. Hirsch, however, advises
those with asthma to avoid using inhalant devices for weight loss
and cautions that the leading side effect of inhalant use is excessive
weight loss, so care should be taken and weight loss should be monitored
continuously.
A serendipitous finding of this study, notes Hirsch
in Scentsational Weight Loss, is that individuals can short-circuit
the way in which an appealing food aroma arouses a desire or hunger
for the food. Through the use of inhalants and flavor enhancers,
he believes, individuals can be deconditioned to develop an appetite
for a food based upon an enticing smell. In his studies, he’s
seen that by inhaling the scent of a food but not actually eating
that food, patterns of associations and hunger triggers were broken.
Having demonstrated that orthonasal olfactory stimuli
produced weight loss, Hirsch designed research to determine whether
or not retronasal olfaction would similarly influence weight loss.
“After we finished our studies looking at the effects of odors
on weight loss, we began to explore the concept that maybe there’s
a better way for us to deliver it because inhaling throughout the
day isn’t a very physiologic way of doing things.” Neither,
he adds, was it convenient for people. They started to explore the
concept of influencing retronasal smell. “The smell that comes
from outside the nose and up to the top of the nose,” he explains,
“we call smell. On the other hand, the smell that comes in
from the mouth, goes up the back of the throat to the oropharynx
to the top of the nose, we call that taste, and it’s really
a form of olfaction.” It’s a trick of perception that’s
much the same, he observes, as that which results if you close your
eyes and push in on your eyeball. “You see light, yet there’s
no light. You misperceive this pressure as light. It’s the
same thing with smell and taste all the time. Smell in our mouth
is perceived as taste, so we decided to use that route to try to
facilitate weight loss.”
Subjects used two different powders each month—one
salty powder to shake on salty foods, and one sweet powder to shake
on sweet foods—for six months. The salty/sweet combinations
included cheddar cheese/cocoa; onion/spearmint; horseradish/banana;
taco/raspberry; ranch/strawberry; and parmesan cheese/malt. “The
idea,” explains Hirsch, “is that the powders would intensify
the flavors of the food, which would make people feel that they’ve
eaten more, and they would then actually eat less.” Subjects’
weight and hedonics were measured monthly and compared with a control
group of 100 individuals enrolled in a traditional diet program.
The control group gained weight, while those who sprinkled tastants
lost weight.
While the experiment clearly worked, the reasons
for its success are fuzzy, and researchers point to a number of
possible mechanisms of action. One of the theories to explain the
weight loss, Hirsch says, is that the odors act on the retromedial
nucleus of the hypothalamus—the satiety sensor—to make
people feel full. And presumably, when they feel full, they would
eat less. But the mechanism may be much more simple than that, he
muses. “It may have worked in other ways. In the same way
that one writes in a food diary and the act of writing reminds them
that they really shouldn’t eat, maybe the act of shaking reminded
them not to eat.” Or perhaps, he suggests, the physical act
of shaking induces kinesthetic memory that reminds them that the
desire to overeat is negative.
Another possibility—and one Hirsch seems more
inclined to believe—is that the odors don’t influence
the hypothalamus but act as a counterhedonic mechanism. “When
you eat a piece of cheesecake, the first bite tastes really good,
but by the last bite, it doesn’t taste as good. If you eat
your fourth cheesecake, you can’t stand the taste anymore,
and the reason is that because your hedonics for a food varies inversely
to how much of it you’ve eaten.” Even if you love a
particular food, he notes, you lose your taste for it if you eat
it repeatedly. This phenomenon may come into play with flavor intensifiers,
he explains. “By providing the same taste to all of the food
through shaking the powders, subjects may have become hedonically
negative toward all the food they ate. Maybe that’s why it
works. I’m not sure.”
The whys are unclear, but the use of flavor intensifiers
does help subjects lose weight. Hirsch points to the results of
the first 108 people involved in the study. Participants used the
different powders for six months, and the researchers noted an average
weight loss of 34.7 pounds in that time period. Individuals in the
control group, on the other hand, gained an average of 1.1 pounds.
This kind of use of odors and tastes might have some greater utility
in weight-loss efforts than most diets, he suggests, because it
doesn’t focus on denial or require self-control, but rather
on satiety. “Most diets are ineffective because they’re
based on restriction, upon telling people not to eat something.
In our research, we don’t restrict anything. We tell people
to eat whatever they want, but to put these powders on whatever
they eat.”
Dietitians interested in helping their clients lose
weight, says Hirsch, should tell them to use their noses. “Tell
your clients to sniff their food before they eat it, which lets
the odor molecules stimulate the olfactory nerve. Advise overweight
individuals to chew their food a lot, not only because it slows
the eating process, but because it aerates more of the molecules
so more molecules reach the top of the nose, which in turn creates
the impression that you’ve eaten more than you actually have.”
In addition, he advises, tell clients to heat their food whenever
possible because heating also aerates more of the molecules. In
addition, blowing bubbles or whipping food may also increase aeration
and let you perceive that you’ve eaten more than you’ve
really consumed.
Hirsch is broadening his studies to include a larger
group of people and seeking several thousand volunteers. Participants
must be between the ages of 18 and 64, at least 10 pounds overweight,
like to eat between meals, and have a normal sense of taste. They
may not be pregnant or breast-feeding, and may not have diabetes,
uncontrolled hypertension, or Sjögren’s syndrome. Subjects
may not exercise for more than 40 minutes per day, and they must
like either ice cream or pickles. Potential volunteers may contact
the Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation, LTD, at 800-664-3880
or visit www.smellandtaste.org.
Hirsch’s hope is that this research will open
greater inquiry into sensory phenomenon in the realm of food research.
The ways in which taste and odors influence the desire to eat, he
claims, has never really been explored. “We’ve done
all sorts of things. We’ve operated on people’s stomachs,
stapled them, banded them, and given them all sorts of medications
that can cause cardiac side effects. But, no one until now has looked
at the effects of chemosensation on diet and appetite.”
— Kate Jackson is a staff writer for Today’s
Dietitian.
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