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  2. Mucositis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mucositis

    "Taste blindness", or an altered sense of taste, is a temporary condition that occurs because of effects on taste buds that are mostly located in the tongue. Sometimes, only partial recovery of taste occurs. Common complaints are of food tasting too sweet or too bitter or of a continuous metallic taste. [citation needed]

  3. Dysgeusia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysgeusia

    The mouth, throat, larynx, and esophagus all have taste buds, which are replaced every ten days. Each taste bud contains receptor cells. [21] Afferent nerves make contact with the receptor cells at the base of the taste bud. [23] A single taste bud is innervated by several afferent nerves, while a single efferent fiber innervates several taste ...

  4. Solitary chemosensory cells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solitary_chemosensory_cells

    In oral cavity, SCCs precedes the development of taste buds. For long time, SCCs were considered to be typical of aquatic vertebrates. Recently, these elements were also demonstrated in mammals. The SCCs share common morphological and biochemical characteristics with the taste cells located in taste buds of the oro-pharyngeal cavity.

  5. Ozempic, Wegovy changes response to sweet tastes in ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/ozempic-wegovy-changes-response...

    In a new study, researchers found that semaglutide helps improve taste sensitivity in women with obesity. Participants also experienced a change in the brain's response to sweet tastes.

  6. What it's like to lose your senses of smell and taste

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/2020-03-27-what-its-like...

    My friend Justin lost his senses of smell and taste last Thursday. "I was drinking coffee, maybe my third cup, and it stopped tasting like anything," he told me. "Then I started to feel a bit achy ...

  7. Peripheral chemoreceptors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peripheral_chemoreceptors

    Taste buds, olfactory bulbs, photoreceptors, and other receptors associated with the five traditional sensory modalities, by contrast, are exteroceptors in that they respond to stimuli outside the body. [3] The body also contains proprioceptors, which respond to the amount of stretch within the organ, usually muscle, that they occupy. [3]

  8. Chemoreceptor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemoreceptor

    Taste receptors in the gustatory system: The primary use of gustation as a type of chemoreception is for the detection of tasteants. Aqueous chemical compounds come into contact with chemoreceptors in the mouth, such as taste buds on the tongue, and trigger responses.

  9. 10 Foods That Famous Chefs Refuse To Eat - AOL

    www.aol.com/10-foods-famous-chefs-refuse...

    And it’s not just the overpowering taste that makes Stewart detest this ingredient — it’s how fake it is. “It’s bad," Stewart told Today . “It’s synthetic, it’s fake, it’s horrible.