医学
随机对照试验
嗅觉
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)
物理疗法
听力学
嗅觉系统
心理学
内科学
精神科
疾病
神经科学
传染病(医学专业)
作者
Matt Lechner,Jacklyn Liu,Nicholas Counsell,D. Gillespie,Deepak P. Chandrasekharan,Ngan Hong Ta,K. Jumani,R. Gupta,S. Rao-Merugumala,John Rocke,C. Williams,A. Tetteh,R. Amnolsingh,Sadie Khwaja,Rachel L. Batterham,Carol H. Yan,Thomas A. Treibel,James Moon,J. Woods,R. Brunton
出处
期刊:Rhinology
[European Rhinologic Society]
日期:2022-06-01
卷期号:60 (3): 188-199
被引量:19
摘要
Background: Olfactory dysfunction is a cardinal symptom of COVID-19 infection, however, studies assessing long-term olfactory dysfunction are limited and no randomised-controlled trials (RCTs) of early olfactory training have been conducted. Methodology: We conducted a prospective, multi-centre study consisting of baseline psychophysical measurements of smell and taste function. Eligible participants were further recruited into a 12-week RCT of olfactory training versus control (safety information). Patient-reported outcomes were measured using an electronic survey and BSIT at baseline and 12 weeks. An additional 1-year follow-up was open to all participants. Results: 218 individuals with a sudden loss of sense of smell of at least 4-weeks were recruited. Psychophysical smell loss was observed in only 32.1%; 63 participants were recruited into the RCT. The absolute difference in BSIT improvement after 12 weeks was 0.45 higher in the intervention arm. 76 participants completed 1-year follow-up; 10/19 (52.6%) of participants with an abnormal baseline BSIT test scored below the normal threshold at 1-year, and 24/29 (82.8%) had persistent parosmia. Conclusions: Early olfactory training may be helpful, although our findings are inconclusive. Notably, a number of individuals who completed the 1-year assessment had persistent smell loss and parosmia at 1-year. As such, both should be considered important entities of long-Covid and further studies to improve management are highly warranted.
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