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      Measurement of chemosensory function

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          Abstract

          Although hundreds of thousands of patients seek medical help annually for disorders of taste and smell, relatively few medical practitioners quantitatively test their patients' chemosensory function, taking their complaints at face value. This is clearly not the approach paid to patients complaining of visual, hearing, or balance problems. Accurate chemosensory testing is essential to establish the nature, degree, and veracity of a patient's complaint, as well as to aid in counseling and in monitoring the effectiveness of treatment strategies and decisions. In many cases, patients perseverate on chemosensory loss that objective assessment demonstrates has resolved. In other cases, patients are malingering. Olfactory testing is critical for not only establishing the validity and degree of the chemosensory dysfunction, but for helping patients place their dysfunction into perspective relative to the function of their peer group. It is well established, for example, that olfactory dysfunction is the rule, rather than the exception, in members of the older population. Moreover, it is now apparent that such dysfunction can be an early sign of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. Importantly, older anosmics are three times more likely to die over the course of an ensuring five-year period than their normosmic peers, a situation that may be averted in some cases by appropriate nutritional and safety counseling. This review provides the clinician, as well as the academic and industrial researcher, with an overview of the available means for accurately assessing smell and taste function, including up-to-date information and normative data for advances in this field.

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          The influences of age on olfaction: a review

          Decreased olfactory function is very common in the older population, being present in over half of those between the ages of 65 and 80 years and in over three quarters of those over the age of 80 years. Such dysfunction significantly influences physical well-being and quality of life, nutrition, the enjoyment of food, as well as everyday safety. Indeed a disproportionate number of the elderly die in accident gas poisonings each year. As described in this review, multiple factors contribute to such age-related loss, including altered nasal engorgement, increased propensity for nasal disease, cumulative damage to the olfactory epithelium from viral and other environmental insults, decrements in mucosal metabolizing enzymes, ossification of cribriform plate foramina, loss of selectivity of receptor cells to odorants, changes in neurotransmitter and neuromodulator systems, and neuronal expression of aberrant proteins associated with neurodegenerative disease. It is now well established that decreased smell loss can be an early sign of such neurodegenerative diseases as Alzheimer's disease and sporadic Parkinson's disease. In this review we provide an overview of the anatomy and physiology of the aging olfactory system, how this system is clinically evaluated, and the multiple pathophysiological factors that are associated with its dysfunction.
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            "Taste Strips" - a rapid, lateralized, gustatory bedside identification test based on impregnated filter papers.

            To elaborate normative values for a clinical psychophysical taste test ("Taste Strips"). The "Taste Strips" are a psychophysical chemical taste test. So far, no definitive normative data had been published and only a fairly small sample size has been investigated. In light of this shortcoming for this easy, reliable and quick taste testing device, we attempted to provide normative values suitable for the clinical use. Normative value acquisition study, multicenter study. The investigation involved 537 participants reporting a normal sense of smell and taste (318 female, 219 male, mean age 44 years, age range 18-87 years). The taste test was based on spoon-shaped filter paper strips ("Taste Strips") impregnated with the four (sweet, sour, salty, and bitter) taste qualities in four different concentrations. The strips were placed on the left or right side of the anterior third of the extended tongue, resulting in a total of 32 trials. With their tongue still extended, patients had to identify the taste from a list of four descriptors, i. e., sweet, sour, salty, and bitter (multiple forced-choice). To obtain an impression of overall gustatory function, the number of correctly identified tastes was summed up for a "taste score". Taste function decreased significantly with age. Women exhibited significantly higher taste scores than men which was true for all age groups. The taste score at the 10(th) percentile was selected as a cut-off value to distinguish normogeusia from hypogeusia. Results from a small series of patients with ageusia confirmed the clinical usefulness of the proposed normative values. The present data provide normative values for the "Taste Strips" based on over 500 subjects tested.
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              Intranasal trigeminal stimulation from odorous volatiles: psychometric responses from anosmic and normal humans.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                World J Otorhinolaryngol Head Neck Surg
                World J Otorhinolaryngol Head Neck Surg
                World Journal of Otorhinolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery
                KeAi Publishing
                2095-8811
                2589-1081
                March 2018
                28 June 2018
                : 4
                : 1
                : 11-28
                Affiliations
                [a ]Smell & Taste Center, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
                [b ]Department of Otorhinolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
                Author notes
                []5 Ravdin Building, 3400 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA. Fax: +1 215 349 5266. richard.doty@ 123456uphs.upenn.edu
                Article
                S2095-8811(18)30022-2
                10.1016/j.wjorl.2018.03.001
                6051764
                30035257
                af8eb988-e0e7-4080-8cb5-cd65e6f2ef81
                © 2018 Chinese Medical Association

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 6 February 2018
                : 1 March 2018
                Categories
                Review Articles and Research Paper

                smell,taste,psychophysics,age,identification,detection,threshold,olfaction,anosmia,ageusia,hyposmia,hypogeusia

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