Abstract

The loss of the senses of smell (anosmia) and taste (ageusia) are rather common disorders, affecting up to 20% of the adult population. Yet, this condition has not received the attention it deserves, most probably because per se such a disorder is not life threatening. However, loss of olfactory function significantly reduces the quality of life of the affected patients, leading to dislike in food and insufficient, exaggerated or unbalanced food intake, unintentional exposure to toxins such as household gas, social isolation, depression, and an overall insecurity. Not only is olfactory dysfunction rather prevalent in the healthy population, it is, in many instances, also a correlate or an early indicator of a panoply of diseases. Importantly, olfactory dysfunction is linked to the two most prominent neurodegenerative disorders, Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease. Anosmia and hyposmia (reduced sense of smell) affect a majority of patients years before the onset of cognitive or motor symptoms, establishing olfactory dysfunction as early biomarker that can enable earlier diagnosis and preventative treatments. In the current health crisis caused by SARS-CoV2, anosmia and dysgeusia as early-onset symptoms in virus-positive patients may prove to be highly relevant and crucial for pre-symptomatic Covid-19 detection from a public health perspective, preceding by days the more classical respiratory tract symptoms such as cough, tightness of the chest or fever. Thus, the olfactory system seems to be at the frontline of pathologic assault, be it through pathogens or insults that can lead to or at least associate with neurodegeneration. The aim of this review is to assemble current knowledge from different medical fields that all share a common denominator, olfactory/gustatory dysfunction, and to distill overarching etiologies and disease progression mechanisms.

Highlights

  • The current Covid-19 pandemic is reaching more and more regions, countries and tens of thousands of new patients daily

  • This study reported that 74% of patients experienced a resolution of anosmia at recovery [31]

  • Olfactory dysfunction can be caused by a multitude of agents and in the process of various pathologies

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Summary

Introduction

The current Covid-19 pandemic is reaching more and more regions, countries and tens of thousands of new patients daily. Exposure to environmental chemicals [2], medical interventions such as radiation or chemo-therapy [3, 4], surgical procedures in the nasal areas such as septoplasty, rhinoplasty, can be at the origin of olfactory dysfunction [5, 6]. Medical conditions such as intranasal growths, epilepsy, psychiatric disorders, hypothyroidism, renal and liver disease can cause anosmia/hyposmia [7]. It is important to distinguish between a preexisting disability and an acquired loss of the sense of smell, as some substances (e.g., products of asparagusic acid) may not be smelled or tasted due to a genetic condition [8]

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