1. Psychophysical Olfactory Tests and Detection of COVID-19 in Patients With Sudden Onset Olfactory Dysfunction: A Prospective Study.
- Author
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Lechien, Jerome R., Cabaraux, Pierre, Chiesa-Estomba, Carlos M., Khalife, Mohamad, Plzak, Jan, Hans, Stéphane, Martiny, Delphine, Calvo-Henriquez, Christian, Barillari, Maria R., Hopkins, Claire, and Saussez, Sven
- Subjects
AGE factors in disease ,LONGITUDINAL method ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,PSYCHOPHYSICS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SMELL ,SMELL disorders ,VIRAL load ,REVERSE transcriptase polymerase chain reaction ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COVID-19 - Abstract
Objective: To investigate the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) status of patients with initial sudden olfactory anosmia (ISOA) through nasopharyngeal swabs for reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis and to explore their olfactory dysfunctions with psychophysical olfactory evaluation. Methods: A total of 78 ISOA patients were recruited from April 6, 2020, to April 10, 2020, through a public call of University of Mons (Mons, Belgium). Patients benefited from nasopharyngeal swabs and fulfilled the patient-reported outcome questionnaire. Among them, 46 patients performed psychophysical olfactory evaluation using olfactory identification testing. Based on the duration of the ISOA, 2 groups of patients were compared: patients with olfactory dysfunction duration ≤12 days (group 1) and those with duration >12 days (group 2). Results: In group 1, 42 patients (87.5%) had a positive viral load determined by RT-PCR and 6 patients (12.5%) were negative. In group 2, 7 patients (23%) had a positive viral load and 23 patients (77%) were negative. The psychophysical olfactory evaluation reported that anosmia and hyposmia occurred in 24 (52%) and 11 (24%) patients, respectively. Eleven patients were normosmic. The viral load was significantly higher in patients of group 1 compared with those of group 2. Conclusions: Coronavirus disease 2019 was detected in a high proportion of ISOA patients, especially over the first 12 days of olfactory dysfunction. Anosmia is an important symptom to consider in the detection of COVID-19 infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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