| Literature DB >> 28292323 |
Miho Tsuruta1, Toru Takahashi2, Miki Tokunaga3, Masanori Iwasaki1, Shota Kataoka1, Satoko Kakuta1, Inho Soh1, Shuji Awano4, Hiromi Hirata5, Masaharu Kagawa6, Toshihiro Ansai7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pathologic subjective halitosis is known as a halitosis complaint without objective confirmation of halitosis by others or by halitometer measurements; it has been reported to be associated with social anxiety disorder. Olfactory reference syndrome is a preoccupation with the false belief that one emits a foul and offensive body odor. Generally, patients with olfactory reference syndrome are concerned with multiple body parts. However, the mouth is known to be the most common source of body odor for those with olfactory reference syndrome, which could imply that the two conditions share similar features. Therefore, we investigated potential causal relationships among pathologic subjective halitosis, olfactory reference syndrome, social anxiety, and preoccupations with body part odors.Entities:
Keywords: Brief psychotherapy; Health volunteers; Olfactory reference syndrome; Pathologic subjective halitosis; Pseudohalitosis; Social anxiety
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28292323 PMCID: PMC5351248 DOI: 10.1186/s40359-017-0176-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychol ISSN: 2050-7283
Fig. 1Flow diagram of participant selection
Characteristics of PSH a, ORS b and SA c and incidence of preoccupation with odors of body parts
| Median (25th percentile, 75th percentile, range) | α coefficient d | |
|---|---|---|
| Pathologic subjective halitosis e | 13 (12, 16; 10–38) | 0.81 |
| Olfactory reference syndrome e | 14 (10, 19; 7–35) | 0.89 |
| Social anxiety e | 18 (14, 23; 7–35) | 0.89 |
| N (%) | ||
| Preoccupation with odors of body parts f (N = 1,360) | ||
| Body odor | 738 (54.3) | |
| Mouth odor | 736 (54.1) | |
| Armpit odor | 543 (39.9) | |
| Foot odor | 428 (31.5) |
a Pathologic subjective halitosis
b Olfactory reference syndrome
c Social anxiety
d Cronbach’s alpha coefficient
e Complete data for PSH, ORS, and SA were available for 1,340, 1,346 and 1,350 subjects, respectively
f Participants were able to choose all the options, i.e., body, mouth, armpit, and foot odors
Association between the levels of pathologic subjective halitosis, ORS a, and social anxiety
|
| Pathologic subjective halitosis b |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | Moderate | Severe | ||
| 732 (54.6%) | 575 (42.9%) | 33 (2.5%) | ||
| Pathologic subjective halitosis | 12 d | 16 | 23 | <0.001 |
| (10–13) e | (14–21) | (22–38) | ||
| Olfactory reference syndrome | 11 | 16 | 26 | <0.001 |
| (7–28) | (7–35) | (11–35) | ||
| Social anxiety | 17 | 19 | 26 | <0.001 |
| (7–35) | (7–35) | (10–35) | ||
a Olfactory reference syndrome
b Participants were divided based on the scale of the pathologic subjective halitosis: the normal group included scores of 10–13; the moderate groups included scores of 14–21; the severe group included scores of 22 and over [20]
c Kruskal-Wallis test
d Median
e Score range
Relationship between pathologic subjective halitosis and preoccupations with body part odors
|
| Pathologic subjective halitosis a |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | Moderate | Severe | ||
| 732 | 575 | 33 | ||
| Mouth odor (○) | 337 (46)c ▽ | 361 (63)▲ | 25 (76)▲ | <0.001 |
| Mouth odor (−) | 395 (54)▲ | 214 (37)▽ | 8 (24)▽ | |
| Body odor (○) | 359 (49)▽ | 341 (59)▲ | 24 (73)▲ | <0.001 |
| Body odor (−) | 373 (51)▲ | 234 (41)▽ | 9 (27)▽ | |
| Armpit odor (○) | 261 (36)▽ | 251 (44)▲ | 17 (52) | 0.005 |
| Armpit odor (−) | 471 (64)▲ | 324 (56)▽ | 16 (48) | |
| Foot odor (○) | 204 (28)▽ | 204 (35)▲ | 11 (33) | 0.013 |
| Foot odor (−) | 528 (72)▲ | 371 (65)▽ | 22 (67) | |
a Participants were divided based on results from the pathologic subjective halitosis scale: the normal group included scores of 10–13; the moderate groups included scores of 14–21; the severe group included scores of 22 and over [20]
b Chi-squared test
c Number (%) of people
▽ Residual analysis was used to indicate fewer incidences than the expected value in the same column in the same group of pathological subjective halitosis scores
▲ Residual analysis was used to indicate more incidences than the expected value in the same column in the same group of pathological subjective halitosis scores
Fig. 2Relationships between pathologic subjective halitosis, olfactory reference syndrome, and preoccupations using Bayesian network analysis