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Heart, Lungs May Be Able to Smell Food

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Ever get that warm feeling in your chest when you get a whiff of brewing coffee or fresh cinnamon rolls baking in the oven? It could, in fact, be your heart “smelling.”

New research has found that some of our internal organs, including our hearts and lungs may have the ability to smell foods and drinks.

Olfactory receptors, previously thought to only exist in the nose and which allow us to sense odors, have been found in other parts of the humanbody, according to the research, presented this week at the National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society in New Orleans.

The discovery helps to resolve a long-standing conundrum: Foods and beverages emit numerous odor components, and yet the nose only detects a small fraction of them.

Project leader Peter Schieberle told Discovery News “that only a tiny little amount of food odorants and tastants (substances that stimulate taste) are used by our receptors in the nose and on the tongue; the major part of the molecules goes down the way to our stomach and might reach the blood stream and finally, the organs.”

“Thus, for a few years, we have followed the idea that odor and taste-active food components might have secondary functions in the human body,” he added.

Schieberle and his colleagues focused their investigation on biogenic amines, which are potent and often stinky chemical messengers found in many foods and drinks, such as chocolate and hot cocoa, meats (including deli meats), milk and cheese. Both fresh and processed foods can have them.

The researchers isolated primary blood cells from human blood samples to see how they would react, by themselves, to the various pungent food and drink chemicals. Remarkably, like a nose following the scent of a freshly baked cinnamon bun, the blood cells would move toward “attractant” odorant compounds from comfort foods, such as chocolate.

Schieberle clarified that “blood cells — not only cells in the nose — have odorant receptors.”

What’s more, the scientists found that the heart, lungs and other parts of the body have them too.

Source: news.discovery.com

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