Premium
CONSEQUENCES OF INDIVIDUAL CHEWING STRATEGIES ON BOLUS RHEOLOGICAL PROPERTIES AT THE SWALLOWING THRESHOLD
Author(s) -
YVEN CLAUDE,
PATARIN JEREMY,
MAGNIN ALBERT,
LABOURÉ HELENE,
REPOUX MARIE,
GUICHARD ELISABETH,
FERON GILLES
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of texture studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.593
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1745-4603
pISSN - 0022-4901
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-4603.2011.00340.x
Subject(s) - mastication , swallowing , bolus (digestion) , medicine , flavor , rheology , food products , dentistry , food science , surgery , materials science , chemistry , pathology , composite material
The chewing process transforms food into bolus for a safe swallow. It is known that humans adapt their chewing behavior to food product characteristics. This study aimed at identifying individual chewing strategies of healthy consumers and determining the respective consequences on bolus properties. For that purpose, the chewing activity of 50 subjects was recorded during consumption of five model cheeses. Boluses were collected at the swallowing threshold for rheological analyses. We found that 30% of subjects showed only slight adaptation of chewing activity to product characteristics and thus produced boluses with different rheological properties. Among the 70% of subjects who adapted their chewing behavior, 57% adapted their behavior via chewing time and 40% adapted their behavior via chewing time and muscular contraction amplitude. Among the bolus rheological parameters, only consistency was not influenced by chewing strategies. Hence, it seemed to be a determinant factor of the swallowing threshold for these products. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS Flavor compounds are released during the oral processing of food. It is thus important to understand how consumers form a bolus and to analyze the consequences of chewing behaviors on bolus properties at the swallowing threshold, at the end of the oral stage of food, to clarify the role of mastication in the release of stimuli responsible for perception. Chewing strategies and bolus properties are some of the key factors of flavor release and product acceptability that is of interest for food manufacturers who can use these factors as additional parameters for new solid product design.