Quizzes & Puzzles43 mins ago
Taste And Smell Missing
9 Answers
My taste and smell are missing, well maybe impaired would be more accurate, as I can taste, I can smell, but it's not what it was a few weeks ago.
History:
February, community-Pneumonia. Hospital, antibiotics, cured, home
March, bronchitis, apparently caught in hospital (gord). Home still, but on more antibiotics, plus an inhaler.
Sense of smell etc okay up to then. After a few weeks, noticed sense of smell disappeared. Blamed inhalers (Dr.Google said so). Stopped using the inhaler, but 3 weeks later, not back.
Evidence. When I came out of hospital, I was pleased to be able to wash my face using my favourite Dove soap, and the perfume was lovely. Then, 2-3 weeks into the inhaler, it just went, and now using Dove soap is like using an unperfumed soap.
Hopefully it'll get better, but I wondered whether other ABers had any similar experiences.
Ta.
Allen
History:
February, community-Pneumonia. Hospital, antibiotics, cured, home
March, bronchitis, apparently caught in hospital (gord). Home still, but on more antibiotics, plus an inhaler.
Sense of smell etc okay up to then. After a few weeks, noticed sense of smell disappeared. Blamed inhalers (Dr.Google said so). Stopped using the inhaler, but 3 weeks later, not back.
Evidence. When I came out of hospital, I was pleased to be able to wash my face using my favourite Dove soap, and the perfume was lovely. Then, 2-3 weeks into the inhaler, it just went, and now using Dove soap is like using an unperfumed soap.
Hopefully it'll get better, but I wondered whether other ABers had any similar experiences.
Ta.
Allen
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by allenlondon. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks geezer, but from my history (see original post) it's doubtful it's the virus. Possible, I suppose, although no other 'virus'-type symptoms. And we're already staying in, as we both have things on the list, plus we're old.
As I said, Dr Google does say it's a not uncommon side effect of inhaler use, and it (i.e. the loss) did co-incide precisely with me starting the inhaling.
A
As I said, Dr Google does say it's a not uncommon side effect of inhaler use, and it (i.e. the loss) did co-incide precisely with me starting the inhaling.
A
yeah people are lurching - yes lairching toward the right statistic
53% of people with covid report anosmia but - - -
you wanna know the chance that if you have anosmia then you have covirus....
and that is called PPV - positive predictive value
um - -- and i dont know what the figure is.
surprisingly the figure depends on how common covid is
lots of covid around - useful a as diagnostic indicator
and if it is rare then there will be other more likely causes
the full house - cough, temp and fatigue has a surprisingly low predictive value - 26%
that is if you have all the leading signs that will cause you to self isolate - then the chance of you having it is one in four .....
53% of people with covid report anosmia but - - -
you wanna know the chance that if you have anosmia then you have covirus....
and that is called PPV - positive predictive value
um - -- and i dont know what the figure is.
surprisingly the figure depends on how common covid is
lots of covid around - useful a as diagnostic indicator
and if it is rare then there will be other more likely causes
the full house - cough, temp and fatigue has a surprisingly low predictive value - 26%
that is if you have all the leading signs that will cause you to self isolate - then the chance of you having it is one in four .....