P.U. - To smell or not to smell

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As someone who has NEVER had a sense of smell for most of the stuff that others live by, I can tell you emphatically that it has NOTHING to do with the sense of taste. They are quite separate.

http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/128/science/When_stopping_to_smell_is_a_problem+.shtml

When stopping to smell is a problem

By Judy Foreman, Globe Staff, 5/8/2001

Barbara Giurlando's troubles began several years ago after her office was remodeled and she was suddenly surrounded by new printers, faxes and copiers that gave off a weird odor that she now thinks was ozone.

All of a sudden, said Giurlando, 62, who lives in Boston, the smell of perfumes, deodorants or after-shave became sickening. She couldn't even read newspapers without feeling queasy from the ink smell.

Susan Rioff, 54, of Lexington has the opposite problem. Seven years ago, she was thrown from a horse and sustained a severe brain injury that left her with no sense of smell. Because smell is central to taste, food also lost its flavor.

''You can stay alive without smelling,'' she said ruefully, ''but you're missing a lot of pleasures. There's a whole part of experience that I cannot share. It makes me very sad.''

By conservative estimates, 4 million Americans have sustained the complete or partial loss of the sense of smell, sometimes, as in Rioff's case, after a head injury, but more often as a result of aging or Alzheimer's disease. In fact, half of all people lose at least part of their sense of smell by age 65 and 75 percent do so by age 80, probably because of lower levels of key brain chemicals, repeated colds or cumulative exposure to toxins or medications. Until recently, there was little that doctors could do to help.

Thousands of others, like Giurlando, develop a hyper-acute sense of smell that drives them to distraction. One woman became as sensitive to smells as cockroaches, whose noses are 100,000 times more sensitive than humans. She could walk around a room and trace by smell where different people had stood, a sensitivity that was so disabling she became housebound.

Still others suffer from phantom smells - imagined foul odors such as that from feces or strong chemicals - that may be caused by nasal polyps or damage to olfactory or taste nerves.

To those not afflicted, having too much or too little sense of smell may seem trivial. But as many as 90 percent of people who lose the sense of smell wind up depressed or anxious, said Dr. Alan Hirsch, neurological director of the Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation in Chicago. And because that loss often means losing the ability to taste as well, people who lose the sense of smell in accidents sometimes win multimillion-dollar awards in court cases.

The sense of smell is one of the most ancient parts of our nervous system, so old that it forms part of the reptilian brain, neural circuits that evolved eons ago. It is so basic that the sense of smell is the only part of the human sensory system that has a direct, neurological link from the outside world to the limbic system in the brain, which controls fear and other emotions.

This special wiring - a kind of neurological shortcut - is vital to survival. It allows an animal to detect immediately any nearby predators, or to avoid other potentially fatal dangers, such as rotting food. This quick link to the brain also allows an animal to detect the presence of an eager mate, through odor molecules called pheromones. The primitive nature of the link between smell and the limbic system is also the reason why smells can trigger long-buried memories.

Lay people often assume that there is only one way to detect odors - by sniffing, or orthonasal olfaction. But there is another way - retronasal olfaction by which smell plays its central role in taste, said Linda Bartoshuk, a psychologist at Yale Medical School.

''When you chew,'' Bartoshuk said, tiny puffs of air containing odor molecules ''drift up the backward route to the nose. You are not truly aware that this is olfaction: It's what most people mistakenly call taste.''

But, in fact, there are only five true tastes - sweet, salty, sour, bitter and umani, a Japanese term for a savory, delicious taste. All the other subtle flavors that we can detect are combinations of these basic tastes plus the sense of smell.

Basic though the sense of smell is, it's only in the last few years that scientists have begun to understand how it works and how to treat it when things go wrong.

Though humans can detect thousands of distinct odors, the nose only has about 1,000 olfactory receptors that lie on specialized nerve cells lining the top of the nasal cavity, said Linda Buck, a Howard Hughes neurobiologist at Harvard Medical School. She and others have recently discovered that particular odors are detected by particular combinations of these receptors.

When an olfactory receptor captures an odor molecule, it triggers electrical signals carried by nerves that run from the nose to the olfactory bulbs inside the brain. Along this path, wispy projections of these nerves, called axons, pass through a porous, paper-thin piece of bone called the cribiform plate.

Someone with a head injury sometimes loses the sense of smell because that bony plate shears off the delicate axons as the brain gets slammed around inside the skull. This breaks the connection between the olfactory receptors and the brain, said Marcia Levin Pelchat, a biological psychologist at the Monell Chemical Sense Center, a nonprofit research organization in Philadelphia.

If the shearing of olfactory nerves is complete, there is little that doctors can do to help. But if some neural connections remain intact, there is a growing array of drugs that may enhance whatever sense of smell is left, including in some people with age-related smell loss, said Hirsch. (So far, there appears to be little doctors can do for people who lose their sense of smell because of Alzheimer's disease.)

Steroids may help in some cases, particularly if the problem involves nasal polyps, benign growths that can cause nasal swelling that blocks odor perception.

Another approach now being tested in Hirsch's lab is to give patients a drug called phosphatidylcholine, a drug sold over the counter as Phoschol, which boosts levels of a brain chemical called acetylcholine, or ACH. The olfactory bulbs need lots of ACH, which suggests that increasing ACH might restore the sense of smell. So far, however, the results have been mixed.

Hirsch is also studying the possible efficacy of zinc, as tablets to be swallowed. Zinc, which appears to help the transmission of signals along olfactory nerves, seems to be safe, he said, though if taken as a nasal spray, it can cause a loss of the sense of smell.

Researchers are also experimenting with Ritalin - the drug used to quiet hyperactive children - because it can raise levels of a brain chemical called norepinephrine, which is important to olfactory bulb function.

Some people with age-related smell loss may also benefit from sniff therapy, which involves repeatedly smelling a strong odor, such as that of a banana, every day. In some people, this kind of olfactory retraining may improve a sagging sense of smell.

For people like Barbara Guirlando whose sense of smell is too acute, desensitization training may help. This means learning to pair a nonoffensive odor, such as pepper, with an offensive one. That doesn't really change the sense of smell, but does allow people to be less conscious of the noxious odor. Another solution is to sniff tubes of peppermint, which also can inhibit the conscious recognition of the offensive smell.

Phantom smells, or phantosmias, often respond to treatment with anticonvulsant or antidepressant drugs.

In the future, higher-technology solutions may become available, including transplantation of neural stem cells.

The bottom line, say those who treat smell disorders, is to see a doctor if you're troubled about smelling too much or too little. But there's also something else you can do: Wear your seatbelt in the car and a helmet if you ride a bike or a horse. You probably can't avoid losing some sense of smell because of aging but you can reduce the odds of losing it through a head injury.

Judy Foreman's column appears every other week in Health-Science. Her past columns are available on Boston.com and www.myhealthsense.com. Her e-mail address is foreman@globe.com.

This story ran on page 7 of the Boston Globe on 5/8/2001. © Copyright 2001 Globe Newspaper Company.

-- Anonymous, May 08, 2001

Answers

Smokers generally are not as sensitive to smells. Also, the sense of taste is diminished.

There is one smell, and I have no idea what it is, that occurs every great once in a while between blue and red moons. Did I say it was rare and infrequent? anyway, when I smell it, something happens shortly after, usually bad.

Weird, huh?

-- Anonymous, May 08, 2001


Barefoot, my premise is that "taste" is too often used to mean the combined experience of taste and smell, and that "taste" is not necessarily diminished by a lack or decrease in sense of smell. It's just that people aren't used to disassociating the two. That said, perhaps there is something about smoking that messes up the taste buds as well.

I can smell some organic acids if they are strong enough, and changing the cat box can be an experience, but I have never smelled food.

OTOH, I have extremely strong likes and dislikes in taste, and was a very picky eater as a child as a result. That's proof to me that my taste buds work just fine, I just can't add in the nuances of stuff that can only be smelled.

-- Anonymous, May 08, 2001


I did notice that my senses of taste and smell improved quite a bit after I quit smoking. Sweetie has a loss of sense of smell in some areas--he can't smell the fantastic perfume given out by the rose "Tropicana," for instance, but he can smell the old-fashioned tea fragrances which are much more subtle. He can smell lavender fragrance too. I don't think there's any food he can't smell. Or eat, for that matter.

-- Anonymous, May 08, 2001

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