Health

New Research Shows Promising Treatment for Long COVID Smell Loss

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One of the distinct symptoms of long COVID is a loss or distortion of smell. Research has documented people who said their coffee smelled like garbage or rotting meat. A person with long COVID quoted in WVU Today said that everything tasted like a burning cigarette. The symptom can last for months or even years after infection, negatively impacting appetite and overall quality of life.

Now research shows a promising way forward to restoring the olfactory sense. The findings, to be presented next week at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America, indicate that an image-guided, minimally invasive procedure may bring back the sense of smell in some people living with long COVID.

“There is a subset of COVID patients who lose their taste for food, get nauseous from certain smells, and really struggle to live normally,” says Adam Zoga, MD, the lead author of the study and a professor of musculoskeletal radiology at Jefferson Health in Philadelphia. “I was absolutely shocked by the results [from our procedure] in the first few patients — including one early patient who could not bathe her 4-year-old daughter because the shampoos and soaps made her sick.”

Improvements Reported Within a Week Post-Injection

Dr. Zoga and colleagues recruited 54 patients who’d had COVID-19 and were desperately seeking help to regain normal smell after every conventional treatment failed. An ear, nose, and throat specialist referred the participants — all of whom reported cases of at least six months of post-COVID parosmia (distorted sense of smell) that was resistant to pharmaceutical and topical therapies.

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