New peer-reviewed research reveals the dietary complications for people experiencing altered smell and taste.
People experiencing smell loss are at a higher risk of experiencing serious diet and nutrition issues including malnutrition, new independent research shows.
The most extreme cases are linked to Parosmia. Parosmia can occur following an initial episode of anosmia (smell loss) although development follows a different path in different people and fluctuates. People with parosmia experience a distortion of smell where disgusting smells are triggered by everyday scents and food items. Items like onion, coffee and garlic are common triggers and can smell like vomit or sewage.
Researchers concluded that, “the ways in which ‘smell loss symptoms’ are currently framed in the literature do not accurately present the extent of potential dietary complications in terms of nutritional compromise, weight loss and weight gain...”
Dr Duika Burges Watson of Newcastle University is lead author on the research. She says: “Some people are struggling with malnutrition, and they are getting little understanding or support. We’ve been led to believe that impacts of smell loss are mild, or a trivial inconvenience but this is far from the experience of those people who are experiencing malnutrition.”
Chrissi Kelly, Founder, AbScent, said; “We have a concern for individuals that may already have acute nutrition issues for instance, pregnant women experiencing morning sickness, those with existing eating disorders, those following specific diets, (e.g., Vegans, Coeliacs), or people undergoing medical treatment and of course young people.”
The research has been published in the peer-reviewed journal PloS One with AbScent’s Covid-19 Smell and Taste Loss moderated Facebook support group from, which had 9000 members at the time of research. Key findings in relation to nutrition include:
• Smell loss has a major impact on appetite, enjoyment, fullness and satiety. One person said, “All food tastes/smells just too disgusting to eat. Only yoghurt is ok. So, I lose weight instead of gaining it.”
• Food became bland and unappetising resulting in a reduced desire to eat, cook or participate in food related activities
• Parosmia and phantosmia had even more harrowing effects on food and eating
• People with parosmia tend to remove themselves from social and familial meal occasions. Where a partner cooks a meal, this can be revolting to a person with parosmia. Likewise socialising with friends in a pub, restaurant or coffee bar can also make people feel physically sick
• Unpleasant smells are constant and fluctuate, one person reports, “burning sort of taste and smell’ then, later that month, an ‘awful metallic taste’”
• Healthcare professionals often focus on the olfactory detection of immediate danger (e.g., smoke etc)
• Some people lose appetite, and are therefore unable to eat and lose weight
• Some people may unexpectedly gain weight as they eat more to try to recapture lost food satisfaction
• People struggled with overwhelming and often pervasively unpleasant parosmic smells. ‘They were described with words that included: sewer, cat food, spicy, pungent, strong herbs, sickly metallic, dirty fish tank, off milk or yoghurt, sweet and grassy, dog food, curry, garlic, sickly sweet metallic, kippers, chemicals and fruity sewage.’
• People alter their cooking, for instance, “I’m trying to focus on some other aspects of the ingesting experience like temperature and texture. I am relying a lot on the comforting aspect of soup, the surprising aspects of salads and crunchy snacks.”
• After time people make adjustments; “I’ve adjusted to foods I can eat and can’t eat now. Some things I just ploughed through and tried to get used to the adjusted taste. Some things still make me feel sick, like washing up liquid and perfume, but most things I can cope with.”
Professor Barry Smith, Director of the Centre for the Study of the Senses at the University of London said; “When it comes to eating, it’s flavour first. We know what we should eat for better health and nutrition, but it’s how the food tastes that encourages us to eat it. Foods lack flavour for those with anosmia, and for people with parosmia many familiar foods taste distorted and disgusting, which means that the range of acceptable and nutritious food is drastically restricted.”
AbScent is a charity registered in England and Wales since 2019 and has created an unrivalled resource of trusted information supported by a distinguished advisory board and working with the latest scientific and clinical evidence. AbScent advocates to increase understanding and raise awareness of the conditions and their impacts supporting research into smell conditions.
For help please visit AbScent’s website https://abscent.org . For more information, case studies and hi resolution images please contact Helen Trevorrow or Vicky Hague on 0794 000 9138 or email helen@greenrow.co.uk
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About AbScent
AbScent is the charity caring about people touched by smell loss. AbScent is an unrivalled resource of trusted information delivered by a distinguished advisory board and working with the latest scientific and clinical evidence. Visit https://abscent.org/ or follow on:
https://www.instagram.com/abScentuk
https://twitter.com/abscentuk
https://www.facebook.com/groups/AbScentParosmia
About Chrissi Kelly
AbScent was established by Chrissi Kelly who experienced first-hand the huge impact of smell loss and the lack of understanding in medicine and the general community. Following a bad sinus infection in 2012 Chrissi woke up, went into the bathroom, brushed her teeth, and realised she could not smell anything. Panic-stricken, her condition led her to a perfumery course, which in turn led to her development of smell training to help people recover from smell loss. Smell training re-trains the brain to smell by stimulating the olfactory nerve to regenerate.
*https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal...
Altered smell and taste: Anosmia, parosmia and the impact of long Covid-19
• Duika L. Burges Watson
• Miglena Campbell
• Claire Hopkins
• Barry Smith
• Chris Kelly
• Vincent Deary