to Kleinstein:
In my career, DA was something to avoid rather than quantify, so I don't have personal experience with the parasitic R-C networks that are often used to discuss DA.
However, in that model, which is linear, DA would not cause any harmonic distortion in the voltage across a practical capacitor driven from a pure-frequency sinusoidal current.
If DA is from ferroelectric hysteresis (presumably true with electrolytics and the crummy ceramic dielectrics), it becomes a non-linear problem.
Respectable audio literature has many examples of careful measurements of audio-frequency THD from capacitors, possibly the result of DA. One series of measurements showed 0.01% THD on some metallized-polyester devices, where the same measurement on a polystyrene capacitor or a C0G ceramic showed unmeasurable THD. The same author, M. Blencowe, points out that silver-mica capacitors have mediocre DA but do not show THD in audio tests. I remember reading the General Radio literature on the choice between polystyrene and mica in standard capacitors and decade boxes, where the micas show an increase in apparent capacitance at low frequencies, which GR attributed to "interfacial polarization" at the mica-silver interface.
Before retirement, my main concern with DA involved the hold capacitor in sample-hold circuits. Lacking a good quantitative handle on the problem, we started with polystyrene back in the early 1980s with TH boards, later changing to polypropylene, but had to settle for C0G ceramic in the later SMT boards. (We could not justify using PTFE.)