Are BA.5 Patients More Likely To Lose Sense of Smell?

  • 2 years ago
Are BA.5 Patients More Likely , To Lose Sense of Smell?.
NBC News reports doctors in the United States
say that with the rise of the BA.5 subvariant, .
peculiar symptoms of coronavirus
may be making a comeback.
Most noticeably, health care providers say many patients once again report a loss of smell.
What I am seeing
in my corner of the world is a spike. , Valentina Parma, psychologist, Monell Chemical Senses Center of Philadelphia, via NBC News.
As the coronavirus pandemic lingers on, new variants and subvariants have appeared less likely to cause a loss of smell than previous ones.
One study found that the Alpha variant, the first variant which caused concern among health care providers.
was 50% less likely to impair smell than
the original strain of coronavirus.
In comparison, the Delta variant only
caused about 44% of patients to
lose their sense of smell.
During the first Omicron wave, only 17%
of patients reported a loss of smell.
During the first Omicron wave, only 17%
of patients reported a loss of smell.
Still early in the wave of the BA.5 subvariant, experts say evidence of loss of smell is based
on personal accounts rather than facts.
I have talked to people overall about losing their taste and smell lately and it seems that there is an uptick, but the data isn’t there yet. , Dr. Lora Bankova, allergist and immunologist Brigham, Women's Hospital of Boston, via NBC News

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