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
50
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.
read more
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.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Comparison of trigeminal lateralization with differing stimulants
Tiffany Chen,Nicolas Poupore,Michael C. Shih,Thomas S. Edwards,Shaun A. Nguyen,Zachary M. Soler,Rodney J. Schlosser +6 more
- 03 Aug 2023
TL;DR: A prospective cohort study of 50 participants compared trigeminal lateralization with three stimulants (eucalyptol, isothiocyanate, acetic acid) and found varying correlations with olfactory testing and patient-reported outcome measures, suggesting distinct TRP receptor sensitivities.
1
The impact of chemosensory dysfunctions on weight loss
Dimitrios Daskalou,Dimitrios Daskalou,Julien W. Hsieh,Julien W. Hsieh,Marianne Hugentobler,Basile Nicolas Landis,Basile Nicolas Landis +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated which findings in patients9 smell and taste workup are predictors of weight loss and found that the odds of losing weight were 2.1 times higher when patients reported changes in aroma perception (p-value=0.012; 95% CI 1.15 - 3.83).
1
The Effect of Olfactory Disorder (and Other Chemosensory Disorders) on Perception, Acceptance, and Consumption of Food
Robert Pellegrino,Alexander Wieck Fjældstad +1 more
- 01 Jan 2024
1
Intranasal trigeminal function in chronic rhinosinusitis: a review
TL;DR: Olfaction and trigeminal function are synergistic and this interaction may contribute to trigemial dysfunction in chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) as discussed by the authors , which may affect the perception of nasal obstruction in CRS.
1
SARS COV-2 and other viral etiology as a possible clue for the olfactory dilemma
Ossama Mansour,Mohamed S. Taha,Mohammad S. Mahmoud,Waleed F. Ezzat,Anas Askoura,Mohamed Farouk Allam,Samia Abdo Girgis,Azza F. Omran,Sara H.A. Agwa,Mohamed Naguib Mohamed +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper , Nasopharyngeal swabs were done for SARS-CoV-2 real-time PCR, and if negative, PCR to other respiratory pathogens was tested.
References
Position Paper on Olfactory Dysfunction
Thomas Hummel,Katherine L. Whitcroft,Peter Andrews,Aytug Altundag,C Cinghi,Richard M. Costanzo,Michael Damm,Johannes Frasnelli,Hilmar Gudziol,Neelima Gupta,Antje Haehner,Eric H. Holbrook,Seok-Chan Hong,David E. Hornung,K.-B. Hüttenbrink,Reda Kamel,Masayoshi Kobayashi,Ioannis Konstantinidis,Basile Nicolas Landis,Donald A. Leopold,Alberto Macchi,Takaki Miwa,R Moesges,J Mullol,Christian A. Mueller,Giancarlo Ottaviano,Giulio Cesare Passali,Carl Philpott,Jayant M. Pinto,V J Ramakrishnan,Philippe Rombaux,Yehudah Roth,R A Schlosser,B Shu,Graciela M. Soler,Pär Stjärne,Boris A. Stuck,Jan Vodička,Antje Welge-Luessen +38 more
TL;DR: Clinicians and researchers are encouraged to adopt a common language in olfactory dysfunction to increase the methodological quality, consistency and generalisability of work in this field.
Updated Sniffin’ Sticks normative data based on an extended sample of 9139 subjects
TL;DR: Significant gender and age effects were observed, with a most pronounced increase of olfactory test scores between age 5 through 20 years and a dramatic decrease at the age of 60 through 71 years.
584
A Study on the Frequency of Olfactory Dysfunction
TL;DR: Evaluated the frequency of olfactory dysfunction in a large representative population without sinonasal complaints and investigated the extent to which general pathological conditions, medications, and aging influence olfaction.
488
"Taste Strips" - a rapid, lateralized, gustatory bedside identification test based on impregnated filter papers.
Basile Nicolas Landis,Antje Welge-Luessen,Annika Brämerson,Mats Bende,Christian A. Mueller,Steven Nordin,Thomas Hummel +6 more
TL;DR: Normative values for the “Taste Strips” are provided based on over 500 subjects tested and a small series of patients with ageusia confirmed the clinical usefulness of the proposed normative values.
The merging of the senses: integration of subthreshold taste and smell
TL;DR: A psychophysical method is used to show cross-modal summation of subthreshold concentrations of selected gustatory and olfactory stimuli, thus demonstrating that central neural integration of taste and smell inputs generates a representation of flavor perception.
422