Back to §07 Process Innovation
§08 - References SUZCHEWS / 2026.05 / 08

Every claim, sourced.

Complete reference list for all eight sections of the SuzChews project deliverable. Search by keyword, filter by source type. Each entry shows which sections cite it.

Samuel Frausto · ACAD 432 12 sources Updated 2026.05
dysgeusia chemotherapy CiTAS scale taste alteration formulation
§ 08

Reference list. 12 shown

  1. 1

    Cleveland Clinic. Dysgeusia (taste disorder): causes, symptoms, treatment. Cleveland Clinic Health Library. Available at: my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/23388-dysgeusia . Accessed 2025.

    Lay / organisation
  2. 2

    Imami AS, Karkın K, Bayram S. Taste alteration in patients receiving chemotherapy. The Journal of Breast Health. 2015. PMID: 28331697. PMC5351492. doi: 10.5152/tjbh.2015.2489

    Peer-reviewed
    Supports → §02.1 Landscape
  3. 3

    Kano T, Kanda K. Development and validation of a chemotherapy-induced taste alteration scale (CiTAS). Oncology Nursing Forum. 2013;40(2):E68–E74. doi: 10.1188/13.ONF.E68-E74

    Peer-reviewed Clinical
  4. 4

    De Silvio S, et al. Taste alterations in cancer patients receiving chemotherapy: a literature review with a focus on the use of dietary counseling. Acta Bio Medica. 2019;90(Suppl 6):17–25. PMID: 31292411. doi: 10.23750/abm.v90i6-S.8278

    Peer-reviewed
  5. 5

    US Pharmacist. Chemotherapy-Induced Dysgeusia. Published March 6, 2023. Available at: uspharmacist.com/article/chemotherapy-induced-dysgeusia . Accessed 2025. (Summarizes Merlo FD et al. Nutrients. 2023;15(1):226.)

    Clinical Lay / organisation
  6. 6

    Jensen SB, Mouridsen HT, Bergmann OJ, Nyvad B, Nauntofte B, Brixen K. Oral mucosal lesions, microbial changes, and taste disturbances induced by adjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer patients. Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, Oral Radiology, and Endodontology. 2008;106(2):217–226.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.tripleo.2008.01.007 (key finding: no relationship between dysgeusia severity and salivary flow rate)

    Peer-reviewed Clinical
  7. 7

    IJpma I, Renken RJ, Ter Horst GJ, Reyners AKL. Metallic taste in cancer patients treated with chemotherapy. Cancer Treatment Reviews. 2015;41(2):179–186. doi: 10.1016/j.ctrv.2014.11.006

    Peer-reviewed
  8. 8

    Merlo FD, Stubljar D, De Micheli G, Fassone E, Mastellone F, Massimino M, Chiaravalli AM, Paltenghi M, Cascinelli N. Chemotherapy-induced dysgeusia: a review of the literature. Nutrients. 2023;15(1):226. PMC9823517. doi: 10.3390/nu15010226

    Peer-reviewed
  9. 9

    Merlo FD, et al. Chemotherapy-induced dysgeusia: a review of the literature. Nutrients. 2023;15(1):226. PMC9823517. doi: 10.3390/nu15010226 (cited for: olfactory damage, peripheral and central neuropathy, cranial nerve involvement)

    Peer-reviewed
  10. 10

    Merlo FD, et al. Chemotherapy-induced dysgeusia: a review of the literature. Nutrients. 2023;15(1):226. PMC9823517. doi: 10.3390/nu15010226 (cited for: time course - onset 4–7 days, persistent up to 10 weeks, recovery ~12 months post-treatment; salt perception most compromised)

    Peer-reviewed Clinical
  11. 11

    Canadian Cancer Society. Taste changes during cancer treatment. Available at: cancer.ca/en/cancer-information/side-effects/taste-changes . Accessed 2025.

    Lay / organisation
  12. 12

    Merlo FD, et al. Chemotherapy-induced dysgeusia: a review of the literature. Nutrients. 2023;15(1):226. PMC9823517. doi: 10.3390/nu15010226 (cited for: zinc deficiency as a contributing variable in chemotherapy-induced taste alteration)

    Peer-reviewed Clinical
§07 / 07 · References · End of SuzChews deliverable Return to start §01 Problem & Hook