Journal Article10.1007/S00415-019-09564-X
Chemosensory decrease in different forms of olfactory dysfunction
Chloé Migneault-Bouchard,Julien W. Hsieh,Marianne Hugentobler,Johannes Frasnelli,Basile Nicolas Landis +4 more
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TL;DR: The present data suggest that the three chemical senses are closely connected for humans underlining that in case of OD the remaining chemical senses (taste, trigeminal function) tend to decrease rather than compensate as this is seen for sensory loss in other modalities.
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Abstract: The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of olfactory dysfunction (OD) on the two other chemical senses, namely gustation and the intranasal trigeminal system. Taste and trigeminal function were analyzed in a retrospective cross-sectional study of 178 participants with OD (n = 78 posttraumatic, n = 42 idiopathic, n = 27 post-infectious and n = 31 chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) OD). All patients had been investigated for OD at our smell and taste outpatient clinic. Evaluation of olfaction was performed by means of the Sniffin’ Sticks test (odor threshold, odor discrimination and odor identification), whereas gustatory function was assessed with the Taste Strips test and the intranasal trigeminal sensitivity by means of the lateralization task. The degree of olfactory impairment was found to depend on the cause of OD, but not on patients’ age. Patients with posttraumatic OD showed lower olfactory function than patients with idiopathic, post-infectious and CRS OD (p = 0.01). Gustatory and trigeminal sensitivity in turn depended on age rather than the cause of olfactory dysfunction. Partial correlations between olfactory, gustatory, and trigeminal scores, with age as covariate, were significant, showing a decrease of taste and trigeminal function proportional to the OD (p < 0.05). The present data suggest that the three chemical senses are closely connected for humans underlining that in case of OD the remaining chemical senses (taste, trigeminal function) tend to decrease rather than compensate as this is seen for sensory loss in other modalities. This finding has direct clinical implications and importance when dealing with smell and taste disorders.
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Citations
Effectiveness and rapidity on olfatory fuction recovery in CRS patients treated with Dupilumab: a real life prospective controlled study
Ignazio La Mantia,Egle Grigaliute,Martina Ragusa,Salvatore Cocuzza,Thomas Radulesco,Alberto Maria Saibene,Christian Calvo-Henriquez,Nicolas Fakhry,Justin Michel,Antonino Maniaci +9 more
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TL;DR: Patients who receive dupilumab treatment may experience a faster recovery of olfactory function compared to those receiving corticosteroid therapy, regardless of the severity of type 2 CRSwNP inflammation, the volume of the polyps, or the patient's subjective symptomatology.
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Olfactory-trigeminal interactions in patients with Parkinson's disease
TL;DR: A review of the literature on PD-specific chemosensory alteration patterns compared with other forms of non-parkinsonian OD (NPOD: postviral, sinunasal, post-traumatic, and idiopathic OD) is presented in this paper.
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Functional Imaging in Olfactory Disorders
Victoria Van Regemorter,Philippe Rombaux,L. Dricot,Ron Kupers,Anaïs Grégoire,Valérie Hox,Caroline Huart +6 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors synthesize key findings regarding the use of functional MRI (fMRI) to assess olfactory dysfunction (OD), and thus, to evaluate whether fMRI could be a reliable clinical diagnostic tool.
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Martin Sylvester Otte,Marie-Luise Bork,Philipp Heinrich Zimmermann,Jens Peter Klußmann,Jan-Christoffer Lüers +4 more
TL;DR: In this article, a psychophysiological diagnostic tool was used to determine possible limitations of nasal chemesthesis after COVID-19 infection by a psychophysics diagnostic tool, and the authors found that not only the ability to smell and taste, but also the extent correlated with the loss of smell, as well as with the values of the taste score.
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