Recovery From COVID-19-Related Olfactory Disorders and Quality of Life: Insights From an Observational Online Study

Author:

Ferdenzi Camille1ORCID,Bousquet Christophe1ORCID,Aguera Pierre-Emmanuel1,Dantec Morgane1,Daudé Christelle1,Fornoni Lesly1,Fournel Arnaud1,Kassan Aurélien1,Mantel Marylou1ORCID,Moranges Maëlle1,Moussy Erwan1,Richard Ortegón Stéphane1,Rouby Catherine1ORCID,Bensafi Moustafa1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, CNRS UMR5292, INSERM U1028, University Claude Bernard Lyon 1, CH Le Vinatier, Bât. 462 Neurocampus, 95 boulevard Pinel, 69675 Bron Cedex, France

Abstract

Abstract Although olfactory disorders (OD) are among the most significant symptoms of COVID-19, recovery time from COVID-19-related OD and their consequences on the quality of life remain poorly documented. We investigated the characteristics and behavioral consequences of COVID-19-related OD using a large-scale study involving 3111 French respondents (78% women) to an online questionnaire over a period of 9 months covering different epidemic waves (from 8 April 2020 to 13 January 2021). In the patients who subjectively recovered from COVID-19-related OD (N = 609), recovery occurred on average after 16 days and most of the time within 1 month (“normal” recovery range); 49 subjectively recovered in 1–2.5 months, and several cases took up to 6.5 months. Among the patients with ongoing OD (N = 2502), 974 were outside the “normal” recovery range (persistent OD) and reported OD for 1–10 months. Developing a persistent OD was more likely with increasing age and in women and was more often associated with parosmia and phantosmia. The deleterious impact of COVID-19-related OD on the quality of life was significantly aggravated by OD duration and was more pronounced in women. Because persistent OD is not infrequent after COVID-19, has deleterious consequences on the quality of life, and receives few solutions from the health practitioners, it would be beneficial to implement screening and treatment programs to minimize the long-term behavioral consequences of COVID-19-related OD.

Funder

University of Lyon

Fondation Fyssen Paris

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Physiology (medical),Sensory Systems,Physiology

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