The Oklahoman

Some may not recover senses

Lasting virus symptom can become life-altering

- Grace Hauck

“There is evidence from

other viruses that may

disrupt the system in

different ways that recovery

Edelmira Rivera was lying on her bed with her husband and 16-month-old son, selecting a movie when she heard a loud bang outside their home in Waco, Texas.

Her sister screamed, “Fire!” “I dropped everything and just grabbed my son and his blanket,” said Rivera, 22. “I could not smell anything. I was so shocked to see the fire at the front door.”

Rivera tested positive for coronaviru­s and lost her sense of smell Jan. 14. Early the next morning, a fire broke out on the other side of her bedroom wall, less than a foot from where she was lying. Rivera couldn’t smell it, nor could the family of four who was staying with them.

Her sister, Bianca, 19, smelled something burning from the other side of the house, initially thinking her sister had burned popcorn in the kitchen. When she smelled burning plastic, Bianca Rivera walked out of her room and saw smoke in the hallway. She quickly ushered seven people and three dogs out of the home before fire consumed it.

Like Edelmira Rivera, millions of people worldwide have suffered changes to their sense of smell or taste after contractin­g COVID-19. In most cases, the symptoms usually last only a few weeks.

A year into the pandemic, researcher­s aren’t sure when some COVID-19 survivors may get their senses back – if ever – and the loss carries long-term safety, hygiene and psychiatri­c implicatio­ns.

“As the pandemic has rolled on, we’ve gotten a better idea about the long-term, chronic effects of COVID on smell and taste,” said Dr. Jay Piccirillo, a professor at the Washington University School of Medicine who studies the topic. “The things we’ve learned suggest that most people recover smell and taste, but not all.”

In the coming year, there will be at least a million new cases of people in the USA with chronicall­y diminished senses of smell or taste because of COVID-19, Piccirillo predicted.

Studies published by the National Library of Medicine and the Journal of Internal Medicine suggest up to 80% of people who have COVID-19 symptoms experience smell or taste dysfunctio­n. Some experience reduced ability to smell or taste. Some have a complete loss. And some experience distorted senses – certain tastes and smells change or become unpleasant – an increasing­ly common outcome, called “parosmia.”

Dr. Evan Reiter, a professor at Virginia Commonweal­th University who studies the issue, said the rate of patients who report dysfunctio­n with smell is similar to those having trouble with taste.

“In general, anytime you’re eating something, it hits the taste buds in your mouth, and you’re smelling the vapors in your food at the same time, so your brain puts it all together to determine how you perceive the taste of food,” Reiter said.

Most people regain their senses within a few weeks, but 5%-10% will continue to have symptoms after six months, Piccirillo said. Their senses may not ever return, he said.

Scientists have known since the early days of the pandemic that smelltaste disturbanc­e is associated with milder cases of COVID-19 and cases in younger people. A study published in the Journal of Internal Medicine reinforced the conclusion­s.

Among more than 2,500 COVID-19 patients at 18 European hospitals in the study, more than 74% self-reported a distorted sense of smell and 46% a distorted sense of taste. The majority in both categories were younger patients and those with milder cases.

The good news is that more than half of the patients with smell distortion­s saw their symptoms disappear within a month, rising to 95% of patients by six months, according to the study. For those remaining 5%, the future remains unclear.

Dr. Pam Dalton, a researcher at the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelph­ia, said patients should not give up hope. Some people who lost their sense of smell because of rhinovirus­es, which cause common colds, regained it after several years, she said.

can occur after six months.

There isn’t a cutoff beyond

which all hope should be

abandoned.”

Dr. Pam Dalton Researcher at the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelph­ia

“There is evidence from other viruses that may disrupt the system in different ways that recovery can occur after six months,” Dalton said. “There isn’t a cutoff beyond which all hope should be abandoned.”

‘It can be depressing’

Loss of smell or taste can have a severe impact on quality of life and make it harder to identify dangers in the environmen­t, such as gas leaks or spoiled food, experts said. For profession­s that rely on the senses, loss of smell or taste can be career-ending. It can alter relationsh­ips, degrade mental health and result in severe weight loss or gain.

New York City resident Lyss Stern, 46, said she’s gained 30 pounds since she lost her senses of smell and taste in late March, when she had a mild case of COPav VID-19 for six weeks. She’s too fatigued to exercise, and she eats a lot of carbs because she likes the way they feel in her mouth.

Stern said she identified a dozen foods she can still taste, and she goes to the same pickle shop every week to stock up on a variety of flavors. In December, Stern smelled an orange again for the first time and started crying. A few weeks ago, she got a whiff of a cookie when she walked past a bakery.

“It can be depressing and upsetting,” Stern said. “Everything to me just tastes gross. But I’m not going to let that get me down – now or ever. I’m here. So many people didn’t survive this beast.”

Stern said her family is moving to another apartment, and she plans to set up smoke and gas detectors in the new home right away. “It’s very scary,” Stern said. “If there’s a leak, I can’t smell it.”

Many patients who lose their sense of smell or taste struggle with social anxiety and hygiene concerns, experts said. Piccirillo said parents often report wishing they knew when their child’s diaper needed to be changed – and when they may unknowingl­y be subjecting friends or family to a foul smell.

“People will report never wearing an item of clothing more than once because they’re afraid it might smell of

their body odor and they can’t detect it. And the same thing goes with a lot of different social interactio­ns,” Dalton said.

Gail Pav, 53, of Long Beach, Mississipp­i, has to ask her husband to tastetest their meals and let her know when there’s something smelly in the trash can. She had a mild case of COVID-19 in September – a stuffy nose for a few days but never a fever. Ever since, her senses have been off.

“This week, the coffee was tasting funny. I’ve been having some really weird smells going on, like fuel. It’s so weird,” said Pav, who still wears perfume every day. “I’ve got a new grandbaby, and I just want to be able to smell Stella.”

For some COVID-19 survivors, the loss of smell or taste can be “crippling,” Piccirillo said. “With all the quality of life problems (during the pandemic), to now be isolated by sense of smell or worse, distortion – it’s very sad,” he said.

Simone Wildes, an infectious disease physician at South Shore Health in Massachuse­tts, said it’s frustratin­g that there are “no specific therapies or more supportive advice” she can give to patients. Many of her patients with loss of smell or taste have turned to online support groups.

As reports of more transmissi­ble coronaviru­s variants increase, Wildes said she’s worried greater spread may result in more cases with loss of smell or taste.

“It does not have to be deadly for you to end up with something very distressin­g in your life,” Wildes said. “For some people, it’s temporary, but for some, it may be permanent.”

A ‘tidal wave’ of trial participan­ts

Research into how the coronaviru­s disrupts senses of taste and smell is ongoing. In July, dozens of researcher­s published a paper suggesting the coronaviru­s changes the sense of smell in patients not by directly infecting smelldetec­ting neurons but by affecting the function of supporting cells.

Researcher­s are beginning to look at human autopsy data to assess the initial theory, said Dr. Sandeep Robert Datta, a professor of neurobiolo­gy at Harvard Medical School and one of the study coauthors. Data available is “broadly consistent” with the hypothesis, Datta said, but he’s keeping an open mind.

“Never before in recent medical history have there been so many people who have lost their sense of smell or lost taste for this period of time,” Datta said. “We need to make a serious basic science effort to help physicians deal with the patients who are flooding their offices.”

Other researcher­s look into whether the coronaviru­s attacks the taste system independen­tly of the smell system.

Are patients losing taste as a direct result of smell loss? Or are they losing chemical sensitivit­y in their mouths? Valentina Parma, a researcher at Temple University who studies the senses of smell and taste, said “the jury is still out” on what mechanism affects taste in patients with COVID-19.

Treatment options for people with loss or distortion of smell or taste are limited, experts said. There’s some research on steroid and vitamin treatments. There’s also a long-used technique called olfactory training, in which patients who lost their sense of smell sniff various oils for a brief time each day for several weeks.

“For those patients who have (distortion­s of smell), we think it’s some sort of miswiring. When they see coffee, they small oranges,” Piccirillo said. “Through olfactory training, you can maybe rewire them. That’s the hypothesis.”

Piccirillo and his team are conducting an olfactory training trial with COVID-19 patients. The training traditiona­lly features four scents: rose, lemon, clove and eucalyptus. For his trial, Piccirillo allows one group of participan­ts to select their preferred scents to test whether the approach is more effective with scents that are important to people.

“The No. 1 scent people want to train on? Smoke,” Piccirillo said. “It’s makes them so scared they can’t smell smoke or natural gas.”

Piccirillo and his team have seen a “tidal wave” of study participan­ts. They’re starting a clinical trial looking at the drug theophylli­ne, a common asthma medicine.

Reiter and Dalton are working with their teams to track the recoveries of COVID-19 patients who lost their sense of smell. Dalton and her team are developing a smell screening test to identify people who may have COVID-19. They deploy the tests to drive-up clinics, as well as Yale University, where some students take the smell test in addition to twice-weekly molecular tests.

“It’s really discouragi­ng with so many people now suffering or who will be suffering,” Piccirillo said. “Any way you slice it, this is a big problem and presents a real challenge to the scientific community to start finding some effective treatment options for people.”

Bianca Rivera, who got her family and friends out of the house fire, doesn’t know why she never contracted COVID-19, even after extended exposure to her family and friends when they moved into hotel rooms together after the blaze.

Her sister, Edelmira, regained her sense of smell a few days after the fire, which is under investigat­ion. The family plans to rebuild their home and install smoke detectors.

“Losing all my shoes, clothes – none of that matters to me. It can be replaced. Not having a home for my son ... I’m grateful that I still have him. I’m still alive to see him grow,” she said.

Rivera said she was initially “skeptical” about COVID-19.

“I thought it was a hoax. I thought it was fake. But actually going through it and losing my smell, it’s scary,” she said. “So take it as a reminder to take care of your home, and to take care of yourself.”

Jeanne’ was born in Oklahoma City to Benneta (Howard) Stubblefie­ld and H a r r y W a r n e r Stubblefie­ld. She was the youngest of their 11 children. She is preceded in death by her husband Robert Sr. and son Richard Rusche, along with, 8 brothers and 2 sisters. She is survived by her 2 children, Debra and husband Harold Painter and Robert Jr. and wife Janet Rusche. She is also survived by brother Ray and his wife Darla Stubblefie­ld and one sister-in-law, Beverly Rusche. She is survived by 4 grandchild­ren. Jennifer and her husband Scott Langley, Stacey and her husband Jeremy Hemby, Patrick Rusche, Tyler Thomas and his wife Alexa and five great grandchild­ren Kylee, Brock and Dylan Langley and Brooklynn and Kaitlynn Hemby. Jeanne’ enjoyed many years of card playing with her brother Ray and his wife Darla Stubblefie­ld. There were many years of camping at Lake Texoma with family and friends. She loved gambling and traveled to many gambling locations. There was even a family caravan to enjoy Las Vegas together. Robert Sr. and Jeanne’ spent many summers traveling around the country by car to show Jennifer and Stacey the United States. Her family was the most important thing in her life. She will be remembered fondly and lovingly by a host of family and friends.

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED BY EDELMIRA RIVERA ?? Edelmira Rivera, 22, was relaxing with her husband and son when a fire broke out in their home in Waco, Texas. She says she didn’t smell anything burning.
PHOTOS PROVIDED BY EDELMIRA RIVERA Edelmira Rivera, 22, was relaxing with her husband and son when a fire broke out in their home in Waco, Texas. She says she didn’t smell anything burning.
 ??  ?? The Rivera family plans to rebuild their home and install smoke detectors after it burned down Jan. 15.
The Rivera family plans to rebuild their home and install smoke detectors after it burned down Jan. 15.
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 ??  ?? Stern
Stern

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