| Literature DB >> 33193009 |
Heike Rebholz1,2,3, Ralf J Braun1, Dennis Ladage4,5, Wolfgang Knoll6, Christoph Kleber4,7, Achim W Hassel7.
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.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS–CoV-2; anosmia; hyposmia; normosmia
Year: 2020 PMID: 33193009 PMCID: PMC7649754 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.569333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Olfactory system. (A) Head sagittal section showing the olfactory and gustatory systems. (B) Olfactory bulb, olfactory epithelium with olfactory receptor neurons. (C) Left: Olfactory receptor neuron with olfactory cilia. Olfactory receptor neurons are bipolar neurons with a dendrite carrying a crust of sensory cilia. Right: Part of an isolated olfactory cilium illustrating processes upon odorant binding. The green arrows show activating, the red adapting processes. AC, Type III adenylate cyclase; AMP, adenosine monophosphate; cAMP, cyclic adenosine monophosphate; [Ca2+], intracellular Ca2+ concentration; CNG, cyclic nucleotide-gated ion channel; Golf, olfactory G protein; PDE, phosphodiesterase; R, odorant receptor.
Major smell and taste-altering pathologies and characteristics.
| Loss of olfaction | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Moderate | Yes |
| Loss of taste | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes, but mainly caused by reduced smell | Yes | Yes, but less prominent | Not described, but dry mouth affects appetite | Yes |
| Onset | Rapid and early | Rapid | Slow | Slow | Early symptom | Early symptom | At time of disease onset | Shortly after disease onset | |
| Regression | Rapid in most cases | Slow (over years) but up to 66% reocever | Frequent but slow and can re-occur | Usually occurs after termination of drug | No | No | No | No | No |
| Occurrence | Up to 70% | Less than 1% | Up to 60% | 10% over age of 65 years | Up to 90% | Up to 85% | No | Rarely | |
| Gender and age factors | In younger, less clinically afflicted patients | 45–65 years, women more affected | 30–60 years | Age, males more affected | Smokers scored significantly better in smell tests | No age or gender differences found | Not known | Age positvely corelates with loss of function | |
| Treatment | Cortico-steroids not recommended, under investigation | Olfactory training, cortico-steroids | Cortico-steroids, anti-histamines, immuno-therapy | Termination of drugs | None | Frequent exposure training, deep brain stimulatiom, D1 agonism | Frequent exposure training,cholin-esterase inhibitor | None | None |
Sources: mainly based on Doty et al. (.
Summarizing known and presumed mechanisms underlying the pathology of smell loss in the various human conditions and disorders.
| Covid-19 | under investigation presumed neurological damage due to peripheral central neuroinvasion of virus | |
| Influenza | Dysosmia during acute infection: olfactory loss due to swelling of nasal mucosa airway obstruction post-viral stage dysosmia: presumably neurological damage is at play since viruses were detected in CSF brain olfacory receptor neurons. | ( |
| Allergic rhinitis | Nasal airway obstruction caused by inflammation since corticoid treatment reduces the smell defect accumulation of CD45+ leukocytes during inflammatory process | ( |
| Drug-induced | Mechanism can be many fold depends on specific drug. Certain drugs were shown to affect signaling capacity of olfacory receptor neurons. | ( |
| Ageing | central peripheral mechanisms: atrophy of olfactory epithelium reduced activity of central olfaction-related brain structures | ( |
| Parkinson's disease | Neurological mechanism: a-synuclein pathology was found in the central olfactory system (anterior olfactory nucleus cortical nucleus of the amygdala piriform cortex olfactory tubercle the entorhinal cortex others). However causality still needs to be established. Further a decline of central brain networks may cause olfactory loss in PD. | ( |
| Alzheimer's disease | Neurological mechanism: Amyloid tau deposits were detected in olfactory pathways (temporal piriform cortex entorhinal cortex CA1). However causality still needs to be established. | ( |
| Huntington's disease | Unknown | |
| ALS | Unknown |