Visually Appealing iEat® Food Products Enhance Visual Cortex Activity in Patients with Dysphagia: A Functional MRI (fMRI) Study
Keishi Okamoto, Satoshi Tanaka, Yasutaka Suzuki, Syuya Kato, Takashi Shigematsu, Kenjiro Kunieda, Ichiro Fujishima

TL;DR
This study shows that visually appealing iEat® foods boost brain activity in dysphagia patients, possibly improving their appetite.
Contribution
Demonstrates that visually appealing texture-modified foods enhance visual cortex activity in dysphagia patients.
Findings
iEat food images increased subjective appetite ratings compared to pureed foods.
iEat foods activated the left middle occipital gyrus more than other stimuli.
Visual cortex activity correlated with higher appetite ratings in dysphagia patients.
Abstract
Objective: Texture-modified diets are common for patients with dysphagia, but can reduce food recognition and appetite. iEat® foods maintain the appearance and nutritional value of regular foods while being softened. This study aimed to investigate the brain activity in patients with dysphagia while viewing visually appealing iEat® food products (EN Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd, Tokyo, Japan) using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Methods: This cross-sectional neuroimaging study was conducted at a rehabilitation hospital from January 2017 to December 2020. Twenty patients with dysphagia were recruited through convenience sampling from inpatients admitted to the hospital. Patients with dysphagia were presented with images of iEat food products, pureed foods, and non-food objects while their brain activity was measured using fMRI. Results: The presentation of iEat food…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDysphagia Assessment and Management · Child Nutrition and Feeding Issues · Esophageal and GI Pathology
