By Karim El-Bar
LONDON (AA) – Scientists have recommended “smell training” for COVID-19 survivors who have lost their sense of smell, local media reported on Saturday.
The program involves sniffing at least four different smells twice a day for several months.
A study by an international group of smell experts, published in the journal International Forum of Allergy & Rhinology, advised against using steroids to treat loss of smell.
Professor Carl Philpott, an expert at the University of East Anglia’s Norwich Medical School, was quoted by local media as saying that there was “very little evidence” that steroids help treat smell loss.
In fact, they have “potential side effects including fluid retention, high blood pressure, and problems with mood swings and behavior,” according to Philpott.
“Luckily most people who experience smell loss as a result of COVID-19 will regain their sense of smell spontaneously. Research shows that 90% of people will have fully recovered their sense of smell after six months,” he said.
“But we do know that smell training could be helpful. This involves sniffing at least four different odors twice a day every day for several months. It has emerged as a cheap, simple, and side effect-free treatment option for various causes of smell loss, including COVID-19.”
The program aims to help recovery based on “neuroplasticity, the brain's ability to reorganize itself to compensate for a change or injury.”
- New cases in UK
A total of 2,061 new infections and 32 more fatalities were reported in the UK on Saturday, raising its total to 4,401,109, including 127,385 deaths.
According to government data, 33,508,590 first doses and 12,071,810 second doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been administered in the UK.