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. 2021 Dec;42(12):4921-4926.
doi: 10.1007/s10072-021-05611-6. Epub 2021 Sep 23.

Qualitative smell/taste disorders as sequelae of acute COVID-19

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Qualitative smell/taste disorders as sequelae of acute COVID-19

Tommaso Ercoli et al. Neurol Sci. 2021 Dec.

Abstract

Background: Qualitative smell/taste disorders (such as phantosmia, parosmia, phantogeusia, and parageusia) have not yet been fully characterized in patients who had COVID-19, whereas quantitative disturbances (i.e., reduction/loss of smell/taste) have been widely investigated.

Objective: To simultaneously assess the presence of both quantitative and qualitative smell/taste dysfunctions in patients who suffered from COVID-19.

Methods: We enrolled 17 consecutive patients who suffered from COVID-19 over the last 6 months and 21 healthy controls, matched for sex and age. After a negative nasopharyngeal swab, the Sniffin' Sticks Test and the Taste Strips were used to assess olfactory and taste function, respectively. At the same time, the presence of phantosmia, parosmia, phantogeusia, and parageusia was investigated with a standardized questionnaire.

Results: Qualitative disturbances of smell and/or taste were found in 6/17 (35.3%) patients. Phantosmia was reported in 2/17 (11.8%) patients and parosmia in 4/17 (23.5%). There were no significant differences in smell test scores between patients who reported phantosmia and/or parosmia and patients who did not. Phantogeusia was described in 3/17 (17.6%) patients, and parageusia was identified in 4/17 (23.5%) patients. All tested patients were normogeusic.

Conclusion: Around one-third of patients who recover from COVID-19 may have persistent qualitative dysfunction in smell/taste domains. Detection of phantogeusia in long-term COVID-19 patients represents a further novel finding. Further investigation is needed to better characterize the pathophysiology of phantosmia, parosmia, phantogeusia, and parageusia in patients who had COVID-19.

Keywords: COVID-19; Olfactory hallucination; Phantogeusia; Smell; Taste.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no competing interests.

Figures

Fig 1.
Fig 1.
Sniffin’ Sticks Test scores (A) and Taste Strips scores (B) of the 17 patients who had COVID-19 and the 21 healthy controls.

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