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Phantom smells : a prevalent COVID-19 symptom that progressively sets in

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2023

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Bouchoucha, Kamar
Bensafi, Moustafa
Ferdenzi, Camille

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European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology. Springer. 2023, 280(3), S. 1219-1229. ISSN 0937-4477. eISSN 1434-4726. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1007/s00405-022-07649-4

Zusammenfassung

Purpose One of the long-term symptoms of COVID-19 is phantosmia, a type of Olfactory Disorder (OD) that has deleterious impacts on patients’ quality of life. The aim of this article was to study how this poorly understood qualitative OD manifests itself in the COVID-19.

Methods 4691 patients with COVID-19 responded to our online questionnaire focusing on COVID-19-related OD. We first analyzed the prevalence of phantosmia in this population. Then, with the help of Natural Language Processing techniques, we investigated the qualitative descriptions of phantom smells by the 1723 respondents who reported phantosmia.

Results The prevalence of phantosmia was of 37%. Women were more likely to report phantosmia than men, as well as respondents for whom OD was described as fluctuating rather than permanent, lasted longer, was partial rather than total and appeared progressively rather than suddenly. The relationship between OD duration and phantosmia followed a logarithmic function, with a prevalence of phantosmia increasing strongly during the first 2 months of the disease before reaching a plateau and no decrease over the 15 months considered in this study. Qualitative analyses of phantosmia descriptions with a sentiment analysis revealed that the descriptions were negatively valenced for 78% of the respondents. Reference to “tobacco” was more frequent in non-smokers. Source names and odor characteristics were used differently according to age and OD duration.

Conclusion The results of this descriptive study of phantosmia contribute to the current efforts of the medical community to better understand and treat this rapidly increasing COVID-19-related OD.

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150 Psychologie

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ISO 690BOUSQUET, Christophe, Kamar BOUCHOUCHA, Moustafa BENSAFI, Camille FERDENZI, 2023. Phantom smells : a prevalent COVID-19 symptom that progressively sets in. In: European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology. Springer. 2023, 280(3), S. 1219-1229. ISSN 0937-4477. eISSN 1434-4726. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1007/s00405-022-07649-4
BibTex
@article{Bousquet2023-03Phant-75074,
  title={Phantom smells : a prevalent COVID-19 symptom that progressively sets in},
  year={2023},
  doi={10.1007/s00405-022-07649-4},
  number={3},
  volume={280},
  issn={0937-4477},
  journal={European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology},
  pages={1219--1229},
  author={Bousquet, Christophe and Bouchoucha, Kamar and Bensafi, Moustafa and Ferdenzi, Camille}
}
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One of the long-term symptoms of COVID-19 is phantosmia, a type of Olfactory Disorder (OD) that has deleterious impacts on patients’ quality of life. The aim of this article was to study how this poorly understood qualitative OD manifests itself in the COVID-19.

Methods
4691 patients with COVID-19 responded to our online questionnaire focusing on COVID-19-related OD. We first analyzed the prevalence of phantosmia in this population. Then, with the help of Natural Language Processing techniques, we investigated the qualitative descriptions of phantom smells by the 1723 respondents who reported phantosmia.

Results
The prevalence of phantosmia was of 37%. Women were more likely to report phantosmia than men, as well as respondents for whom OD was described as fluctuating rather than permanent, lasted longer, was partial rather than total and appeared progressively rather than suddenly. The relationship between OD duration and phantosmia followed a logarithmic function, with a prevalence of phantosmia increasing strongly during the first 2 months of the disease before reaching a plateau and no decrease over the 15 months considered in this study. Qualitative analyses of phantosmia descriptions with a sentiment analysis revealed that the descriptions were negatively valenced for 78% of the respondents. Reference to “tobacco” was more frequent in non-smokers. Source names and odor characteristics were used differently according to age and OD duration.

Conclusion
The results of this descriptive study of phantosmia contribute to the current efforts of the medical community to better understand and treat this rapidly increasing COVID-19-related OD.</dcterms:abstract>
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