Some coronavirus survivors still haven't regained smell and taste, concerning and confusing experts

Most people who develop coronavirus-induced anosmia regain their sense of smell and taste soon after recovery. But for some, the loss persists, leaving some experts concerned the pandemic may leave huge numbers of people with a permanent loss of smell and taste.

Katherin Hansen used to be able to recreate a restaurant recipe just from tasting a dish before contracting COVID-19.

Katherin Hansen used to be able to recreate a restaurant recipe just from tasting a dish before contracting COVID-19. Source: The New York Times

A diminished sense of smell, called anosmia, has emerged as one of the telltale symptoms of COVID-19. It is the first symptom for some patients, and sometimes the only one. 

Often accompanied by an inability to taste, anosmia occurs abruptly and dramatically in these patients, almost as if a switch had been flipped.

Most regain their senses of smell and taste after they recover, usually within weeks. But in a minority of patients, the loss persists, and doctors cannot say when or if the senses will return.
Scientists know little about how the virus causes persistent anosmia or how to cure it.

But cases are piling up as the coronavirus sweeps across the world, and some experts fear that the pandemic may leave huge numbers of people with a permanent loss of smell and taste.

Smell is intimately tied to both taste and appetite, and anosmia often robs people of the pleasure of eating.

But the sudden absence also may have a profound impact on mood and quality of life. Studies have linked anosmia to social isolation and anhedonia, an inability to feel pleasure, as well as a strange sense of detachment.

British scientists studied the experiences of 9,000 COVID-19 patients who joined a Facebook support group.

Many members said they had not only lost pleasure in eating, but also in socialising. The loss had weakened their bonds with other people, leaving them feeling isolated, even detached from reality.
“From a public health perspective, this is really important,” said Sandeep Robert Datta, an associate professor of neurobiology at Harvard Medical School.

“If you think worldwide about the number of people with COVID, even if only 10 per cent have a more prolonged smell loss, we’re talking about potentially millions of people.”

The most immediate effects may be nutritional. People with anosmia may continue to perceive basic tastes, but smell adds complexity to the perception of flavour via hundreds of odour receptors signaling the brain.

Many people who can’t smell will lose their appetites, putting them at risk of nutritional deficits and unintended weight loss.

Smells also serve as a primal alarm system alerting humans to dangers in our environment, like gas leaks.

A diminished sense of smell in old age is one reason older individuals are more prone to accidents, like fires caused by leaving burning food on the stove.


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3 min read
Published 4 January 2021 10:19am
By Roni Caryn Rabin
Source: The New York Times



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