Anosmia: Difference between revisions
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* [[CJD, Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease|CJD]] (Ref: Sporadic CJD Found in Olfactory Cilia, Medscape) | * [[CJD, Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease|CJD]] (Ref: Sporadic CJD Found in Olfactory Cilia, Medscape) | ||
The Sun is pretty big.<ref>E. Miller, ''The Sun'', (New York: Academic Press, 2005), 23–25.</ref> The Moon, however, is not so big.<ref>R. Smith, "Size of the Moon", ''Scientific American'', 46 (April 1978): 44–46.</ref> | |||
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==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
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Revision as of 02:32, 28 March 2023
Clinic
- Also known as smell blindness, is the loss of the ability to detect one or more smells.
- Anosmia may be temporary or permanent. It differs from hyposmia, which is a decreased sensitivity to some or all smells.
Causes
- Inflammation of the nasal mucosa, blockage of nasal passages or
- Destruction of one temporal lobe.
When anosmia is caused by inflammatory changes in the nasal passageways, it is treated simply by reducing inflammation.
- It can be caused by chronic meningitis and neurosyphilis that would increase intracranial pressure over a long period of time.
- Ciliopathy, including ciliopathy due to primary ciliary dyskinesia.
Dynamic | Dynamic | |
---|---|---|
Peripheral | Central | Static |
|
|
Nasal polyps
|
- Diabetes
- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
- Long term alcoholism
- Stroke
- Epilepsy
- Liver or kidney disease
- Kallmann syndrome
- Primary ciliary dyskinesia
- Post-perfusion syndrome
- Laryngectomy with permanent tracheostomy
- Esthesioneuroblastoma is an exceedingly rare cancerous tumor that originates in or near the olfactory nerve. Symptoms are anosmia (loss of sense of smell) often accompanied by chronic sinusitis.
- Intranasal drug use
- Aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD), also known as Samter's triad
- Foster Kennedy syndrome
- Cadmium poisoning
- Smoking
- Neurotropic virus
- Schizophrenia
- Pernicious anemia
- Zinc deficiency
- Bell's Palsy or nerve paralysis and damage
- Idiopathic intracranial hypertension
- Suprasellar meningioma
- Refsum's disease
- Adrenergic agonists or withdrawal from alpha blockers (vasoconstriction)
- Sarcoidosis
- Zinc-based intranasal cold products, including remedies labelled as "homeopathic"
- Paget's disease of bone
- Cerebral aneurysm
- Granulomatosis with polyangiitis
- Snakebite
- Idiopathic anosmia (cause cannot be determined)
Miasms
- COV-19
- HSV-1, HSV-2 </ref> Landis BN, Vodicka J, Hummel T. Olfactory dysfunction following herpetic meningoencephalitis. J Neurol. 2010 Mar;257(3):439-43. doi: 10.1007/s00415-009-5344-7. Epub 2009 Oct 10. PMID: 19820982.</ref>
- NVCJD (Ref: REUBER M, AL-DIN ASN, BABORIE A, et al, New variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease presenting with loss of taste and smell, Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry 2001;71:412-413.
- CJD (Ref: Sporadic CJD Found in Olfactory Cilia, Medscape)
The Sun is pretty big.[1] The Moon, however, is not so big.[2]