Skip to main content

Loss of Smell Should Be Listed as an Early COVID-19 Symptom, Study Finds



According to a new study in the United States, sudden loss of smell really does appear to be an early sign of COVID-19, especially in those with mild cases.
In over a thousand patients with undiagnosed flu-like symptoms, experts found those with a loss of smell and taste had a 10-fold greater chance of testing positive for COVID-19.
"The most common first sign of a COVID-19 infection remains fever, but fatigue and loss of smell and taste follow as other very common initial symptoms," clarifies otolaryngologist and head and neck surgeon Carol Yan from the University of California San Diego.
The good news? If you're sniffing isn't up to snuff, it won't be forever, and it might actually bode well for your recovery.
Surveying 1,480 patients, researchers found just over 100 tested positive for COVID-19. Among this subset of patients, a profound loss of smell and taste was quite common, but these senses usually came back within two to four weeks of infection, matching the timing of disease recovery overall. 
"Among the COVID-19 patients with smell loss, more than 70 percent had reported improvement of smell at the time of survey and of those who hadn't reported improvement, many had only been diagnosed recently," says Yan.
Compared to a fever or fatigue, a profound loss of smell or taste can often go overlooked or be explained away, meaning that many people with this symptom could be 'hidden carriers' of the virus without even knowing it.
In response to their research, the university has added loss of smell and taste to its screening requirements for visitors and staff, and its medical professionals are now using this symptom as a possible marker for the virus.
Of course, this is just one study in a global race to better understand this deadly virus. Further research is not only necessary, it's inevitable. We still don't really know what the full gamut of COVID-19 symptoms is, or how varied they can be; both those answers will be crucial in how we move forward as a global community.
In the new study, for instance, a person with a sore throat was actually four to five times more likely to test negative for COVID-19, adding yet another way for physicians to distinguish between those who are infected and those who may not be. 
So far, South Korea, China and Italy have found about a third of patients who test positive for COVID-19 also report a loss of smell, and many have no other symptoms. The new research in the US seems to largely support that idea, albeit in a group with mostly mild cases.
Up to 71 percent of COVID-19-positive patients in this study reported an impairment in their smell and taste. Compared to other symptoms, the researchers say these signs showed the greatest association with COVID-19.
Unlike other studies, this research only looked at a subset of patients, most of whom were not hospitalised and none of whom required intubation. This is probably why the percentage is so much higher than what other countries have found.
In light of their results, the authors suggest that perhaps patients who are walking around with this disease show more symptoms associated with smell and taste, while those who experience a more "pulmonary-centric" infection might show different symptoms.
If this is true - and further research will need to investigate the idea - it could mean that a loss of smell might bode well for a person's overall recovery; they might not have as severe a response to the virus.
While there's still plenty more to learn, researchers in California think we know enough at this point to make a loss of smell and taste an official symptom.
"It is our hope that with these findings other institutions will follow suit and not only list smell and taste loss as a symptom of COVID-19, but use it as a screening measure for the virus across the world," says Yan.
The study was published in the International Forum of Allergy & Rhinology.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Scientists Discover Deep-Sea Bacteria Have a Metabolism Unlike Anything We've Seen Before

A curious kind of bacteria found on the floor of the deep ocean might have a metabolism unlike anything we've seen before. Known as Acetobacterium woodii, scientists in Germany claim that this species, which also lives in the intestines of termites, can both create and use hydrogen and carbon dioxide to produce energy all on its own, even without the need for oxygen.  The ability to survive on organic and inorganic substances alike without oxygen makes this bacterium quite unique among microorganisms, and while scientists have long suspected something like this existed, it's never been clearly described among acetogenic bacteria, which produce methane free from oxygen.  "There have already been speculations that many ancient life forms possess the kind of metabolism that we have described in A. woodii," microbiologist Volker Müller from Goethe University Frankfurt explains. "This is assumed, for example, for the Asgard archaea that were just discovered a few year...

For The First Time, Scientists Find a Way to Make Targeted Edits to Mitochondrial DNA

Most cells in your body come with two genetic libraries; one in the nucleus, and the other inside structures called mitochondria - also known as the 'powerhouses of the cell'. Until now, we've only had a way to make changes to one. A combined effort by several research teams in the US has led to a process that could one day allow us to modify the instructions making up the cell's 'other' genome, and potentially treat a range of conditions that affect how we power our bodies. The molecular foundation of this revolutionary gene editing tool is a toxin called DddA, secreted by the bacterium Burkholderia cenocepacia to sabotage other microbes when competition over resources turns serious. Researchers from the University of Washington have had an interest in the toxin's talents for a while, finding it converts a nucleic acid base called cytosine into a different one commonly found in RNA, called uracil. It's far from the first time researchers have looked to ...