| CANCER & TREATMENTS SUPPORT & SURVIVORSHIP PREVENTION & RISK ASSESSMENT CLINICAL TRIALS & RESEARCH LIVING WITH CANCER | ||
Home > Support & Survivorship > Patient and Family Support Services Program > Making Every Bite Count > Managing Eating Problems Topic List Food Just Doesn't Taste the SameChemotherapy, radiation therapy, or the cancer itself may cause this problem. Some people have a bitter or a metallic taste in their mouth. For others, food tastes "like nothing". People frequently say they no longer enjoy red meat. For others, the desire for sweets is gone. Taste preferences can change from day to day.General Suggestions
Things to AvoidDo not force yourself to eat foods that taste bad. Instead, find substitutes for those foods. For example, if red meat doesn't taste right, select chicken, turkey, fish, eggs, cottage cheese, cheese, yogurt, or tofu.Avoid eating no-salt-added or low-salt varieties of canned soups or vegetables (unless you have high blood pressure and are instructed to do so by your physician). Soup and vegetables tend to have a metallic taste when the salt is eliminated in the processing. Do not drink citrus juices such as orange or grapefruit immediately after brushing your teeth with fluoride toothpaste. The chemical mixture of fluoride with citric acid makes a rather unpleasant taste in your mouth. If a metallic taste in your mouth persists, avoid using metal dishes and utensils. Try using plastic eating utensils, chopsticks, or porcelain Chinese soup spoons. Smoking cigarettes and drinking alcoholic beverages blunt and distort your ability to taste. Alcohol also makes your mouth dry. |
See Also: Nutrition During Treatment Information Guide University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center © 2008 Regents of the University of Michigan / Developed & maintained by: Public Relations & Marketing Communications. Contact Us or UMHS. The information presented is not a tool for self diagnosis or a substitute for professional care. |
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