It's been more than five years since COVID-19 started wreaking havoc on our lives. The symptoms of the disease include high fever, trouble breathing, and loss of sense of taste and smell. The ...
It is well known that Covid can impair your sense of smell, but a new study has found that those who lose it may never get it ...
Self-reported change or loss in smell or taste is an accurate signal of verified hyposmia after COVID-19, although there is also a high rate of hyposmia among those with no reported change or loss ...
People who suspect that their sense of smell has been dulled after a bout of COVID-19 are likely correct, a new study using ...
On a farm that straddles one of the five ancient roadways that radiate from the Hill of Tara, once the seat of the high kings ...
Among participants reporting a loss in smell or change in smell after COVID, 79.8% had hyposmia on formal testing using the ...
A dismantled health infrastructure leaves the U.S. incredibly vulnerable, warns infectious-disease expert Michael Osterholm.
ANSWER: Most people recover their loss of smell after COVID. Having had this for two years is a bad sign; however, the fact that she does have some sense of smell is a good sign.
In a modest workshop filled with the fragrance of seasoned wood, 78-year-old Ghulam Mohammad Zaz continues a craft his family ...
A new study shows COVID-19 smell loss is widespread, lasting, and often hidden—even in people who think they’ve fully recovered.
While this chain did struggle in the past few years, a CEO switch up has led the chain back on the road to success, and we ...