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Electrogustometry: Validation of Bipolar Electrode Stimulation.

Chemical Senses 2023 March 25
Electrogustometry (EGM) is a practical way to test taste. It is typically performed using unipolar electrodes, with the anode on the tongue and the cathode on the hand, forearm, or neck. This results in electric current passing through non-taste tissues and adds a level of impracticality to its clinical application. We compared, using a repeated measures counterbalanced design, anodal thresholds from a unipolar electrode to those of a unique bipolar electrode in which the anode and cathode are contiguously located. Both sides of the anterior tongue were assessed in 70 subjects, as were the effects of age and sex. Non-parametric analyses were performed. The median threshold of the bipolar electrode's central disk (2.49 µA) did not differ from that of the unipolar electrode (2.96 µA) (p=0.84). On average, older persons exhibited higher thresholds. No significant sex or tongue side effects were evident. Interestingly, when the annular (donut-shaped) bipolar electrode served as the anode, the threshold was higher than that of the other electrodes (5.19 µA; ps<0.001). This conceivably reflected lessened summation of activity among adjacent afferents and partial sampling of tongue regions with fewer taste buds. Correlations among all EGM thresholds were nominally higher for women than for men, ranging from 0.83 to 0.85 for women and 0.54 to 0.67 for men; all ps<0.001). This study validates the use of a bipolar electrode for assessing taste function, averting movement of current through non-taste-related tissues and making such testing safer and more practical.

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