Loss of smell, taste early symptom of COVID-19: Report
PTI, Mar 29, 2020, 12:21 PM IST
Houston: A loss of smell and taste may be the early symptom of COVID-19 infection, according to a latest report by a leading American professional association of medical specialists.
Currently, there have been reports of taste and smell disorders related to COVID-19 from multiple countries around the world as well as within the US, said James C Denneny III, MD, executive vice president and CEO of the American Academy of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery (AAO-HNS).
In light of the reports of these symptoms, AAO-HNS has proposed adding loss of smell and taste anosmia and dysgeusia to the list of available screening tools for COVID-19 infection.
Denneny told Healio Primary Care — which provides daily internal medicine and primary care news — that typical causes for loss of smell are allergies, sinus infections or a common cold, and if loss of smell occurs without the presence of any of these conditions, “this symptom may be an additional identifier for COVID-19-infected patients who may require testing and/or self-isolation”.
However, he explained that the timing of the onset of these symptoms has varied, with some patients with COVID-19 reporting loss of smell or taste as one of their initial symptoms, and others reporting that these symptoms developed later in their illness.
“There is clearly work to be done in compiling the data from around the world to measure frequency, as well as relationship to the disease itself. Until that is fully established, it makes sense to use this as a potential additional identifier of patients having the virus,” he said.
To collect more data on these symptoms in COVID-19, the AAO-HNS Infectious Disease and Patient Safety Quality Improvement Committees developed the COVID-19 Anosmia Reporting Tool for Clinicians. Using this tool, healthcare providers of all specialties can confidentially report loss of smell and taste related to COVID-19.
The tool assesses whether the source of COVID-19 infection is identifiable, risk factors for infections, onset of anosmia and dysgeusia and what other symptoms started at the same time as anosmia and dysgeusia.
“The value of adding unexplained anosmia as a potential official symptom of COVID-19… would allow earlier detection and isolation of potential carriers and improve safety for healthcare workers,” Denneny added.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
Air pollution linked to more hospitalisations for all causes, mental illness too, study finds
Plant-based meat alternatives linked to increased risk of depression in vegetarians, study finds
Lung transplant at right time only cure for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis that killed Ustad Zakir Hussain
ICMR sets up India’s first diabetes biobank in Chennai
AI Meets Health: The Rise of Smart Fitness Solutions
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
Gadag: 2-yo girl dies after being run over by water tanker
Mangaluru Traffic Advisory: Netravathi Bridge repair work to affect vehicle movement
MUDA case: Karnataka HC defers filing of Lokayukta police report
BJP files police complaint against Rahul, seeks FIR under ‘attempt to murder, assault, incitement’
Mid-sea crash: Navy institutes ‘Board of Inquiry’ to establish facts of case
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.