4.4 Article

Patterns and clinical outcomes of olfactory and gustatory disorders in six months: Prospective study of 1031 COVID-19 patients

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AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OTOLARYNGOLOGY
卷 43, 期 1, 页码 -

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W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.amjoto.2021.103259

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COVID-19; Anosmia; Hyposmia; Dysgeusia; SARS-CoV-2

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This study found that most cases of olfactory and gustatory dysfunction caused by COVID-19 infection recover within the first two weeks, with recovery not directly related to olfactory training, treatment received, or patient demographics. Parosmia was identified as an independent predictor for complete recovery, while phantosmia was associated with a lower probability of complete recovery.
Objective: This study aims to comprehensively evaluate olfactory and gustatory dysfunctions during the COVID19 pandemic regarding onset, course, associated symptoms, prognosis and relation to patients' demographics, treatment received and other symptoms. Patients& methods: This is a prospective study conducted on patients proven to be infected with COVID-19 and with olfactory/gustatory dysfunction symptoms. Detailed history was taken from each patient about the onset of this dysfunction, associated symptoms. Then follow-up survey was done after 6 months to evaluate the prognosis. Results: 1031 patients were included in the study, aged 18 to 69 years old, with 31.8% were male. Olfactory/ gustatory dysfunctions occurred after other COVID-19 symptoms in 43.5% of cases, occurred suddenly in 80.4% and gradually in 19.6%. These dysfunctions were anosmia & ageusia in 50.2%, hyposmia & hypogeusia in 23.3%, anosmia alone in 17.7%, phantosmia in 18%, Parosmia in 28.4%. In terms of recovery 6-month follow up, 680 patients (66%) recovered completely, 22.1% recovered partially while 11.9% did not recover. Most improvement occurred in the first two weeks. Headache, malaise, nasal obstruction and rhinorrhea were the commonest COVID-19 symptoms associated. Conclusion: Most recovery of olfactory/gustatory dysfunction in COVID-19 infection occurs at the first two weeks and is unrelated to patient demographics, treatment or olfactory training. Parosmia is an independent predictor for complete recovery, while phantosmia is significantly associated with lower probability of complete recovery.

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