Younger women had scores corresponding to lower average age- and sex-standardized percentiles. Among all participants who ...
Self-reported change or loss in smell or taste is an accurate signal of verified hyposmia after COVID-19, although there is also a high rate of hyposmia among those with no reported change or loss ...
Science says you're probably right if you suspect your sense of smell has been weaker after having COVID-19. The post COVID-19 can dull your sense of smell for years after you have it appeared first ...
Among participants reporting a loss in smell or change in smell after COVID, 79.8% had hyposmia on formal testing using the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT), including 23% ...
About 66% of COVID-19 patients who didn't notice any changes in their sense of smell scored poorly on the identification test ...
A new study shows COVID-19 smell loss is widespread, lasting, and often hidden—even in people who think they’ve fully recovered.
Loss of smell is often an early symptom of Alzheimer’s disease, and, according to new research published in the Journal of Neuroscience, could possibly serve as a warning sign at the onset of the ...
An impaired sense of smell can persist for years following COVID, even when patients recover from their initial illness, new ...
NEW YORK, Sept. 25, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- People who suspect that their sense of smell has been dulled after a bout of COVID-19 are likely correct, a new study using an objective, 40-odor test shows.
Although it may not be noticeable, the loss of smell may linger for years for some people after a Covid-19 infection, ...