Varied Effects of COVID-19 Chemosensory Loss and Distortion on Appetite: Implications for Understanding Motives for Eating and Drinking
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Ethics
2.3. Procedure
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1. Altered Chemosensory Perception
3.1.1. Olfaction (Anosmia, Hyposmia, Parosmia and Phantosmia)
‘…the first time I noticed that my smell was affected I was washing clothes and I always smell the conditioner and I couldn’t smell anything.’ (Emma)
‘…like when you have a cold and… you can’t really smell anything, it just progressively got worse, and then I didn’t have any smell at all.’ (Emersyn)
‘…my mum sent me these gorgeous freesias that I know smell beautiful. I had to say to my husband do these smell? And he was like, yes they smell lovely.’ (Kallie)
‘…because if you don’t have a blocked nose you expect to be able to smell. So when you can’t smell anything, it’s really, really peculiar.’ (Starla)
‘I just like went to the kitchen and got like the strongest smelling thing I could think of, like I got like a jar of Marmite and I tried to smell it and I couldn’t like smell a single thing…’ (Ella)
‘…the dog, I can’t smell the dog, which is quite nice.’ (Melba)
‘…we drive past this landfill site and my mum made a comment about it, and I couldn’t smell it at all.’ (Marie)
‘…the loss of smell came around 6 pm, it was literally just like instant, like one minute I could smell and next minute I was like oh god I can’t smell anything.’ (David)
‘I remember we were having a bonfire at home… I was standing right in the smoke and I couldn’t smell anything, and it was at that point that I knew I lost my (sense of) smell.’ (Martha)
‘…my sense of smell also left but slowly over maybe 48 h, like at six hours I could smell a little bit, and then I held a Vick under my nose and I couldn’t smell it…’ (Norene)
‘…it was summer last year, and I couldn’t smell sunscreen. It’s those little things, but I missed the smell of food.’ (Meredith)
‘…we have a really strong candle in our kitchen, and everyday I’d get up and smell that to see if it had come back yet, and I’d be like oh I still can’t smell that.’ (Dianne)
‘…any food that was salty or had a bit of tang to it, (or) urine, coffee all smelled like marmite, and so it’s been messing with my mind, and like red wine and everything used to smell like marmite.’ (Emersyn)
‘I don’t know what it is about oil, it’s just got a really strong smell to me now… it’s like rancid smell so if anything is really cooked in oil I don’t really like it anymore… also eggs so just like the flavour of them like how I remember has completely changed basically. …smell is distorted so like perfume didn’t smell very nice anymore, so I don’t wear perfume.’ (Angela)
‘I had this really strong smell of petrol just like intermittently even like last week everything just smelt really gross.’ (Martha)
‘It smelt like something was burning in my nose, so that was all I could smell like a burning smell.’ (Kallie)
‘Something very weird that I forgot about happened after I felt like it (parosmia) had gone, and this was really odd, is I kept smelling smoke everywhere like cigarette smoke or smoke, and I kept asking everyone if they could smell smoke... So either I just got a phantom smell of smoke …or my smell was more acute.’ (Laurissa)
‘I had a really weird phantom smell though where I could smell like bin juice, I smelt it like everyday for like a week and it was like literally in the back of my nose.’ (Angela)
‘Like I’d smell random things that weren’t there… I’d be sat at work and I could like smell burning toast or something, or like fish, it was pretty grim…’ (Melba)
3.1.2. Gustation
‘I think it was the (loss of) flavour more than salty or sweet tastes.’ (Emma)
‘…we had a pizza, and I said gosh this tastes really salty.’ (Kallie)
‘I couldn’t taste anything other than if things were savoury or sweet…’ (Wendy)
‘I could taste the sweetness and the saltiness, but I couldn’t taste the actual flavour.’ (Regana)
‘I’d buy salt and vinegar pringles just to like physically kind of make my tongue tingle.’ (Angela)
‘I could basically only really taste sourness, saltiness, slightly sweetness.’ (Marie)
‘…it all sort of tastes the same, it’s all like kind of simple flavours if that makes sense, like sweet salty, hot or cold and that’s it.’ (David)
‘I couldn’t even taste like salt or sweetness, it was literally like nothing…’ (Starla)
‘I couldn’t even taste like sweet or salty, not for at least a month if not longer.’ (Melba)
‘I couldn’t taste anything, not even salty or sweet or anything.’ (Kimberley)
For one participant there was evidence of a specific loss of bitter taste perception.
‘I can only taste if something is salty has sugar in or if something is spicy. And not bitter, bitter stuff doesn’t taste bitter. …in like takeaways and stuff I can taste MSG.’ (Emersyn)
‘Salty and sweet, I wanted to eat salty stuff rather than sweet I don’t know why, I think because I could definitely taste a bit of salt, whereas I couldn’t taste anything else.’ (Martha)
‘Everything, there was just nothing to it. I can’t taste delicate flavours, I can only taste if something is salty has sugar in or if something is spicy… I couldn’t taste anything.’ (Emersyn)
‘I was eating, it was like there was nothing in my mouth, it was so bizarre. I didn’t notice my sense of smell, I didn’t realize how dependent your sense of taste is on your sense of smell. Because I could taste the saltiness or the sweetness for example, but within that no spices…’ (Meredith)
3.1.3. Chemesthesis
‘I know that chili causes a chemical reaction on your tongue so that doesn’t necessarily require smell to taste it, so I used to just pour chili and spicy stuff all over my food.’ (Emersyn)
‘…and my boyfriend sprayed his deodorant quite a lot and I could only tell when I could feel it in my throat too much…’ (Wendy)
‘…or like hot sauce because it was warm in my mouth.’ (Ella)
‘…my dad maybe cooked me a spicy meal one night and the spice was definitely still there.’ (Andre)
‘…spices made my mouth burn, so I’d have really spicy stuff just to experience something.’ (Meredith)
‘…like a can of coke, because that’s bubbly…’ (Alexadria)
‘…I opted for more spicy food… stuff with a lot more heat in it just to taste something.’ (Gena)
3.2. Theme 2. Appetite (and Body Weight)
‘When I first got the positive result back, I’d been feeling a bit off my food. So, I hadn’t been eating normally.’ (Emma)
‘On the Friday night I just felt really lethargic, and on the Saturday couldn’t literally get off the sofa.’ (Emma)
‘…it just really affected my appetite…I think because I was ill as well, but when you can’t taste, I just wasn’t hungry at all.’ (Martha)
‘I wasn’t really eating anything, so I couldn’t really tell if I’d lost my taste at the point…’ (Andre).
‘…but I didn’t want to eat anything anyway at the start, because my appetite had disappeared… I lost weight to begin with because I wasn’t eating, because I was ill anyway.’ (Meredith)
‘I lost my appetite because I didn’t want to eat things that I enjoyed or drink things that I enjoyed, that didn’t have the taste that I was expecting. …I started losing quite a lot of weight.’ (Starla)
‘…feeling sick… was a really specific weird thing in relation to food…that’s really distressing when it tastes really disgusting.’ (Laurissa)
‘…literally I only ate when I got so physically hungry, that like I had to, there was no pleasure or enjoyment from it…I’d get irritated to have to eat, but obviously you need to eat to survive.’ (Ella)
‘I definitely ate less, and I didn’t really flavour anything because there’s sort of no point.’ (Melba)
‘I didn’t eat as much on the exact day I couldn’t taste just because it wasn’t enjoyable, it was just weird…’ (Kimberly)
‘…not being able to taste I wasn’t incentivized to eat anything that wasn’t put down in front of me.’ (Martha)
‘You kind of lose your appetite because if you can’t taste and smell things and you feel a bit weird, it’s all down hill for the food thing.’ (Norene)
‘I just kept things as normal, like I cooked the same food because of the family really. I’d just eat it…’ (Kallie)
‘…I actually found myself eating more because I was trying to find something that I could taste…healthy foods like fruit and vegetables stimulated nothing in taste so I would eat probably quite a lot of unhealthy foods…’ (Angela)
‘I definitely didn’t lose weight… I’d say I basically ate the same to begin with, and then I because it only lasted 7 days, the last few days I definitely got more bored of eating, but because I was bored and by myself I ate…’ (Marie)
‘…(during the period of anosmia) my appetite was unaffected, I was just as hungry as ever, so I would eat what I would usually eat.’ (Andre)
‘…when I lost my taste and smell I thought it was brilliant because I thought I was going to lose like five pounds over Christmas, but I was eating for the sake of eating and I couldn’t taste it at all.’ (Alexandria)
‘…when I was eating, I was eating more mindlessly I wasn’t thinking about it’ (Meredith)
‘…because I couldn’t taste anything it didn’t feel like I was eating anything as it was going down my throat, so I definitely think I had more to eat over that period of time… than what I usually eat.’ (Gena)
‘I really enjoy cooking and it just took all the fun out of it like you know when your smelling the ingredients as you’re making it, it builds up your appetite for the food. …Just meant it was so unexciting, didn’t enjoy cooking I thought it was such a chore.’ (Wendy)
‘…when you cook something and you smell it and it makes you hungry, that kind of thing has just only recently come back so when you’re cooking and you’re like oh my god that smells really nice.’ (Melba)
‘…he (Dianne’s husband) was doing like bacon sandwiches for us, but I couldn’t smell it, you know when the smell of bacon fills your house it makes you feel hungry, and I’d think I don’t really fancy it because I can’t smell it…’ (Dianne)
3.3. Theme 3. Altered Food Choices
‘Definitely did change what I was eating, I was just eating really boring food and that mainly had interesting textures, not really interesting tastes more. I was eating more spicy food I think…’ (Wendy)
‘The texture, if you take avocado, without taste is horrible because it’s just like nothingness.’ (Laurissa)
‘I really tried to latch onto the salty and sweet things as much as I could.’ (Regana)
‘I remember going through like a jelly phase, just because jelly was like a texture to be eating.’ (Ella)
‘So it just meant that everything had to be about texture… I couldn’t eat like scrambled eggs or anything that was like really mushy… So I ate a lot of toast a lot of crisps just because of the crunch…’ (Angela)
‘I had like chicken and salad for lunch I could just taste the textures, so I got kind of bored of eating that kind of thing. …after a while I would only really eat things that were spicy or salty or sour things. So like popcorn for example, I could taste that was salty…’ (Marie)
‘I appreciated takeaways quite a lot, like food with stronger flavours sort of thing… like stronger salty flavours or like sweet flavours…’ (David)
‘I was putting loads of salt on my food because that was something that I could like taste a little…’ (Martha).
‘I wasn’t interested in eating very much but toast, maybe because the texture was maybe quite comforting, so something you’re used to… We were really into the texture.’ (Norene)
‘…having super sweet or super salty, like loads of soy sauce for example.’ (Meredith)
‘…I definitely went for much more spicy foods… like spicy stuff, curries, KFC because that’s got a lot of taste.’ (Gena)
3.4. Theme 4. Drinks
3.4.1. Alcoholic Drinks
‘I stopped drinking wine, but I could taste white wine better so if I was going to have a meal, I would have white wine.’ (Emersyn)
‘…actually it’s funny about the Baileys (a flavoured alcoholic drink), because I did start drinking it after a few weeks and I couldn’t taste it properly and it was an almond soya one, and then I put it in the fridge and I tasted it after Christmas and I couldn’t believe that I was actually drinking (it), because it was when I could taste it better it was so disgusting.’ (Starla)
‘…it definitely made drinking alcohol easier but not nice. Like when you’re drinking a nice cocktail you want to be able to taste it, I couldn’t so it was a bit boring.’ (Wendy)
‘I could down a really strong vodka coke whatever, I could obviously feel the burn but there was just no flavour, which the burn’s ok it’s just the flavour that I hate… and wine just tasted like water which was great and so yes I ended up drinking a lot more…’ (Regana)
‘…it affected what alcohol I drank, like that was the time when I drank all the most horrible things we had round the house because nothing mattered again like what it tasted like.’ (Ella)
‘…I drank a lot of cheap wine because I couldn’t taste it…’ (Angela)
‘…white wine started to taste like really acidic to me and so I didn’t really enjoy drinking that.’ (Marie)
‘…so for example wine red or white…so you could sort of get hints of the flavour from drinking that but not much… but it definitely didn’t affect my drinking as such, if anything it made it worse.’ (Andre)
‘I had a glass of wine and I thought there’s no point kind of drinking it because I can’t taste it, but then I thought oh actually I can kind of taste it, but texture which was really weird.’ (Norene)
‘I didn’t enjoy drinking alcohol in the same way because I quite like choosing a nice beer, I just drank spirits at that point, so it did change what I was drinking.’ (Meredith)
3.4.2. Non-Alcoholic Drinks
‘…it took the enjoyment out of everything. Even drinking a cup of coffee, like I wanted a cup of coffee but it just like didn’t taste like coffee it was just like a hot drink.’ (Kallie)
‘…I think it reduced the amount of like recreational drinks as in like fizzy drinks or juices I don’t remember having like any of that. I was purely drinking coffee for like the effects of caffeine.’ (Ella)
‘…I tried it again with more squash and when I didn’t taste it there was just no point, so I just stuck with water the whole day.’ (Kimberly)
‘Coffee does now taste different, yes coffee tastes really different, it sort of tastes a bit like bread kind of that sounds really weird doesn’t it that’s the closest thing I can kind of compare it to… Coffee is the one thing that has changed. …other than that, I don’t think I changed my drinking habits.’ (David)
‘…I didn’t drink any nice herbal teas like I normally would, it was like nothing drinking hot water.’ (Meredith)
‘I had no desire to drink anything, I didn’t feel thirsty… I didn’t drink as much, of anything.’ (Alexandria)
‘I have one coffee every morning and I can’t remember tasting it, but I put more sugar in it as well and again because I couldn’t taste it.’ (Gena)
3.5. Theme 5. Eating Rituals
3.5.1. Meal Times
‘I’d missed meals, which was unusual for me…’ (Emma)
‘All of that went, there was no sitting at the table or doing anything…’ (Laurissa)
‘So yeah, it was really disruptive to my eating pattern and I think I could go a whole day without eating anything at all.’ (Alexandria)
‘I continued to eat normally because of my husband and kids, he was cooking, and we were still having breakfast, lunch and dinner so I was’ (Dianne)
3.5.2. Snacking
‘…I stopped snacking…’ (Emersyn)
‘…after like supper normally, I really crave something really sugary like a piece of chocolate or like some fruit or something like that and I didn’t get that at all…’ (Martha)
‘I did continue snacking I think, just out of habit more than anything…’ (Dianne)
3.5.3. Social Bonding and Commensality
‘I think it would have affected me socially, not appreciating food and things.’ (Kallie)
‘…when we eat we sit at the table and it’s a pleasant thing, it’s conversation where we chat…’ (Emma)
‘But there’s something about people eating together, it’s very sort of bonding… I think it really emphasized for me how much it’s social…’ (Laurissa)
‘…also it’s (food) such a social thing isn’t it, like such a talking point…’ (Angela)
‘…for certain events like a nice family BBQ which is like a nice wholesome thing in itself…’ (Andre)
3.5.4. Comfort Eating
‘…before when I’d eat comfort food it was mainly about the taste, and now not really.’ (Emersyn)
‘Yes, I was still comfort eating, I just felt like it wasn’t fair, I was watching my husband eating them (chocolates) and I felt like if you can eat them then I’m not going to not eat them.’ (Kallie).
‘…when I was eating that risotto… it was comforting because risotto’s quite a comforting thing…’ (Laurissa).
‘…it made me more of a kind of comfort food eater…’ (Regana)
‘…I definitely didn’t get the same comfort from food.’ (Ella)
‘…I still did comfort eating, but I just couldn’t taste anything.’ (Angela)
‘…I would try and eat healthy, but I remember eating a lot more comfort food because I remember thinking you’re in so much pain when you eat you may as well eat something you really enjoy, and so I was having so many biscuits in one go.’ (Kimberley)
‘one big aspect of food’s comforting nature is gone, so yes it was quite depressing for a while.’ (David)
‘…my boredom and stuff when I had it… I think maybe it made it (comfort eating) worse, I don’t know as in I ate more, but also it doesn’t really give you that same like… if you can’t taste it…’ (Marie)
‘texture was maybe quite comforting, so something you’re used to, and something like that is quite comforting.’ (Norene)
‘there were times I was eating, and I couldn’t taste it, but I’d be stressed so I’d eat it anyway.’ (Meredith).
3.6. Coping
‘It didn’t impact me, and I didn’t get stressed about it all, as I said I was inquisitive and interested more than like horrified.’ (Emma)
‘I just hoped it would get better, I never took any nasal sprays, nothing like that I just kept reading up on it and others’ experiences to see what they were saying.’ (Kallie)
‘If it lasted anymore more than that (10 days) then I would have gone into fight mode and try and sort it out… But I definitely did a lot of googling, which I tried to not do because it does stress you out.’ (Wendy)
‘I didn’t get any help. We did try to test stuff like we kind of made a game out of it like we’d blindfold each other and see if you could guess what they were putting in your mouth…’ (Regana)
‘We basically googled it every day, because it was basically when it was becoming a symptom, just to see what you could do and how long it would last and actually quite a lot of my friends had it at the same time so we were all talking to each other about whether ours was getting worse or getting better.’ (Marie)
‘I looked up this like thing called smell therapy where you like smell different strong smells…’ (David)
‘…during the day when I’m not eating I wouldn’t think about it at all, so I didn’t really seek help or look up anything to try and solve it, I just kind of thought it will come back soon probably.’ (Andre)
‘I did loads of googling research and stuff and then I thought I just felt like the more stressed I got about it the less likely it would be to come back. So I just tried to forget about it…’ (Martha)
‘I did some research and there was stuff on smell training, so I got some essential oils like lemon and rose and I was doing that in the morning and the evening, but it felt really stupid because obviously I couldn’t smell anything…’ (Meredith)
‘It didn’t bother me too much, I mean I would get up every morning and smell that candle to see if I could smell that, but other than that I wasn’t too worried.’ (Dianne)
4. Discussion
5. Summary and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Questions | Prompts and Probes |
---|---|
How did you first become aware you were losing your sense of smell or taste? | |
How long did each symptom last? | |
Did it affect what you were eating? | |
Did other sensory properties of food become more important? | For example, texture or temperature? |
Did it affect the amount of food you ate? | Did you notice any subsequent change in your weight? |
Did it affect your mood? | |
Did it affect your eating rituals? | For example, cooking, mealtimes, food shopping? |
Did it affect what you were drinking? | For example, tea, coffee or alcohol? |
Did you notice the loss of smell day-to-day? | In other aspects of life, other than food? |
Did it affect your appreciation of smell or taste? | |
How did you cope with it? | Did you seek help? |
Would you describe yourself as a comfort eater? Did it affect your quality of life? Is there anything else I should have asked you that I haven’t included? | Was this affected? |
Participant 1 | Olfaction | Gustation | Chemesthesis | Appetite | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Emma (F, 49) | ↓ | → | → | ↓ | Decreased appetite preceded anosmia. Anosmia present for 2–3 weeks. Lost weight. |
Emersyn (F, 21) | ↓ | ↓ bitter | → | → | Anosmia an early symptom. No significant recovery of olfaction at time of interview after 4–5 months, with onset of parosmia after approximately 3 months. |
Kallie (F, 40) | ↓ | → | → | → | Other symptoms preceded anosmia. Anosmia present for 2 weeks, accompanied initially by phantosmia? Gradual recovery of olfaction, accompanied by parosmia. |
Starla (F, 48) | ↓ | ↓ | ? | ↓ | Sudden onset of anosmia a few days to a week after onset of other symptoms. Partial recovery of olfaction after > 4 weeks. Lost weight. |
Wendy (F, 21) | ↓ | → | → | → | Anosmia an early symptom. Anosmia present for 10 days. |
Laurissa, (F 57) | ↓ | → | ? | ↓ | Sore throat preceded sudden onset of parosmia by one day. Altered sense of taste linked with nausea and food disgust. Recovery of olfaction after 10 days, accompanied by phantosmia. Ate less, lost weight. |
Regana, (F, 21) | ↓ | → | → | ↑ | Other symptoms preceded anosmia by one week. Onset and recovery from anosmia rapid, each within one day. Anosmia present for 10 days. Weight increased. |
Ella (F, 21) | ↓ | ? | → | ↓ | Other symptoms preceded anosmia. Anosmia present for 3 weeks. Weight decreased. |
Angela (F, 21) | ↓ | → | → | ↑ | Sudden onset of anosmia 3 days after other symptoms. Anosmia present for at least several weeks. Gradual recovery of olfaction, accompanied by persisting parosmia and phantosmia. Weight increased. |
Melba (F, 22) | ↓ | ↓ | ? | ↓ | Anosmia an early symptom. Gradual recovery of olfaction over 3–4 months, accompanied by phantosmia still present at interview after 6–7 months. Small weight loss. |
Marie (F, 21) | ↓ | → | → | → | Sudden onset of anosmia preceded other symptoms. Gradual recovery of olfaction. Weight unchanged. |
Kimberly (F, 22) | ↓ | ↓ | ? | ↓ | Sudden onset of anosmia and ageusia lasting 1 day. Preceded by other symptoms by 3 to 4 days. Sore throat made swallowing painful. |
David (M, 21) | ↓ | → | → | ↓ | Sudden onset of anosmia half a day after onset of other symptoms. No symptoms after 2 weeks, except for anosmia. Partial recovery of olfaction, accompanied by parosmia, over 5–6 months. Weight decreased. |
Andre (M, 22) | ↓ | ? | → | ↓ → | Anosmia/ageusia? present for 2 weeks. Preceded by other symptoms. Ate very little during first 4–5 days because felt ‘badly ill’. |
Martha (F, 21) | ↓ | ↓ sweet | ? | ↓ | Sudden onset of anosmia, following onset of other symptoms. Gradual recovery of olfaction over 5 months, accompanied by parosmia. |
Norene (F, 68) | ↓ | ? | → | ↓ | Gradual onset of anosmia, beginning at same time as other symptoms. Gradual recovery of olfaction. |
Meredith (F, 25) | ↓ | → | → | ↓→ | Loss of appetite preceded anosmia. Anosmia first apparent 5–6 days after onset of other symptoms. Anosmia present for 4 months, followed by full recovery of olfaction over several days. |
Alexandria (F, 30) | ↓ | ? | ? | → | Other symptoms preceded onset of anosmia by a ‘few days’. Anosmia present for 4 days. Olfaction recovered before remission of other symptoms, which lasted for up to 2–3 weeks. Weight unchanged. |
Dianne (F, 37) | ↓ | ? | → | → | Sudden onset of anosmia 5 days after testing positive for COVID-19. Anosmia present for 5 days. Weight unchanged. |
Gena (F, 35) | ↓ | → | → | ↑ | Anosmia present for one week. |
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Turner, L.; Rogers, P.J. Varied Effects of COVID-19 Chemosensory Loss and Distortion on Appetite: Implications for Understanding Motives for Eating and Drinking. Foods 2022, 11, 607. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11040607
Turner L, Rogers PJ. Varied Effects of COVID-19 Chemosensory Loss and Distortion on Appetite: Implications for Understanding Motives for Eating and Drinking. Foods. 2022; 11(4):607. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11040607
Chicago/Turabian StyleTurner, Lydia, and Peter J. Rogers. 2022. "Varied Effects of COVID-19 Chemosensory Loss and Distortion on Appetite: Implications for Understanding Motives for Eating and Drinking" Foods 11, no. 4: 607. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11040607