Olfactory dysfunction in COVID patients is common. Researchers recently searched the medical literature for studies reporting changes in olfactory structures detected through imaging tests of patients with COVID, and found that swelling in nasal passages is responsible for some temporary olfactory dysfunction. Their results in were published in The Laryngoscope.
A recent meta-analysis based on 83 studies provided high-quality evidence of a combined prevalence of olfactory dysfunction in 47.9% of COVID patients. Olfactory dysfunction is diagnosed more commonly among female patients and outpatients.
The researchers observed abnormality in olfactory clefts, which provide a crucial channel for airborne molecules to reach sensory olfactory neurons. The rate of abnormalities was nearly 16-fold higher in patients with COVID and olfactory dysfunction (63%) compared with controls (4%).
“Before this study, most scientists thought that the loss of smell in COVID was mainly due to inflammation and damage to the olfactory nerves. Now, we have compiled evidence from medical imaging that COVID loss of smell is also due to swelling and blockage of the passages in the nose that conduct smells,” said senior author Neville Wei Yang Teo, MRCS, MMed, of Singapore General Hospital.
“We think this is good news for patients who want to recover their sense of smell, since these blockages are expected to resolve with time, while nerve damage in comparison would likely be more difficult to recover from,” added lead author Claire Jing-Wen Tan, of the National University of Singapore. “These findings may not fully account for those who suffer from prolonged olfactory dysfunction, however, and further studies that evaluate patients in this group may provide more information.”
Source: Wiley