Chattanooga Times Free Press

Covid-19 affects smell and taste

DEAR DOCTOR: Why are people making a big deal out of losing smell and taste with COVID-19? The same thing happens with a plain old cold.

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DEAR READER: Those who have slogged through a cold or the flu know that losing your sense of smell, and often your sense of taste, is common. The same has proven to be true with COVID-19. However, this loss of the sense of smell, known as anosmia, occurs for two different reasons.

Let’s start with a cold and the flu. Our immune systems fight these infections on multiple fronts, including the one-two punch of mucus production and inflammati­on. This combinatio­n does an excellent job of blocking our sinuses. Since the sense of taste is closely linked to the sense of smell, both take a steep dive during the pluggedup phase of an illness. With specialize­d nerve endings in the nasal passages unable to send a full range of informatio­n to the brain, the subtleties of taste are gone. What we’re left with are the broad strokes of bold flavors. That’s why, when we’re fighting a cold or the flu, the sweetness of hot tea with honey or the saltiness of chicken soup tastes particular­ly good.

When it comes to COVID-19, researcher­s have recently uncovered the surprising reason for anosmia as one of the earliest symptoms of infection. Rather than congestion, as with a cold or the flu, the loss of smell in people with COVID-19 occurs due to how the virus affects the nervous system. According to a study published by researcher­s at Harvard University earlier this summer, SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, attacks certain cells whose job is to support the olfactory sensory neurons. These are the specialize­d nerve cells that detect the chemical compounds that make up a scent, known as odorants, and transmit that informatio­n to the brain. The brain then decodes the electrical impulses, which allows us to experience them as scent. By damaging the support cells, the virus prevents the olfactory sensory neurons from responding to the molecules that make up different types of scents. The good news is that for most patients, recovery from COVID-19 includes a return of their sense of smell.

As we’ve mentioned here before, researcher­s are still in the earliest stages of learning about the novel coronaviru­s and COVID-19. That makes each new bit of informatio­n important. As cases began to mount, it became clear that only about half of contagious people presented with a fever as an early symptom. At the same time, it emerged that a loss of the sense of smell was one of the first symptoms of infection. Since early interventi­on gives people who become ill with COVID-19 a better chance of recovery, this has been a significan­t finding. Thus, the widespread news stories and discussion­s that you have noticed.

 ??  ?? Dr. Elizabeth Ko
Dr.
Eve Glazier
Dr. Elizabeth Ko Dr. Eve Glazier

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