Abstract Title:

Effects of zinc supplementation on serum zinc concentration and ratio of apo/holo-activities of angiotensin converting enzyme in patients with taste impairment.

Abstract Source:

Auris Nasus Larynx. 2009 Aug 27. PMID: 19716667

Abstract Author(s):

Tsukasa Takaoka, Nobuko Sarukura, Chizuru Ueda, Yoshiaki Kitamura, Bukasa Kalubi, Naoki Toda, Koji Abe, Shigeru Yamamoto, Noriaki Takeda

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effects of zinc supplementation on hypogeusia, serum zinc concentration and the ratio of apo/holo-activities of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE ratio) in patients with taste impairment. ACE ratio was used as an index of zinc nutritional status. METHODS: Forty patients complaining of taste impairment were divided into two groups: zinc deficiency taste impairment (n=12) and idiopathic taste impairment (n=28). Patients with zincemia values of less than 63mug/dl with no history of other disorder or medication known to cause dysgeusia were diagnosed as zinc deficiency group, while those with the same condition and values more than 64mug/dl were considered to belong to the idiopathic group. Patients orally received 150mg of polaprezinc containing 33mg of zinc every day. Subjective symptom was scored according to visual analogue scale (VAS). RESULTS: Zinc supplementation improved hypogeusia in both idiopathic and zinc deficiency groups. The mean improvements of VAS were 3.02+/-3.03 in the idiopathic group and 3.13+/-2.53 in the zinc deficiency group. Thus, there were no significant differences in idiopathic and zinc deficiency groups. Significant correlations were found between the improvement of VAS score and the ACE ratio after zinc supplementation in both idiopathic and zinc deficiency groups. On the contrary, significant correlations were not found between the improvement of VAS score and the zinc concentration in the serum after zinc supplementation in both groups. CONCLUSION: The results of the present study indicated that zinc deficiency is a predominant factor underlying taste impairment and ACE ratio may be a predictor of the prognosis for taste impairment after zinc supplementation, in addition to a more sensitive indicator of zinc nutrition than zinc concentration in the serum.

Study Type : Human Study
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