嗅觉丧失:对其在 COVID-19 中的重要性的认识的演变,以及仍有待回答的问题。
Anosmia: an evolution of our understanding of its importance in COVID-19 and what questions remain to be answered.
机构信息
COVID-19 Task Force of the Young-Otolaryngologists of the International Federations of Oto-rhino-laryngological Societies (YO-IFOS), Paris, France.
Department of Human Anatomy and Experimental Oncology, Faculty of Medicine, UMONS Research Institute for Health Sciences and Technology, University of Mons (UMons), Mons, Belgium.
出版信息
Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol. 2021 Jul;278(7):2187-2191. doi: 10.1007/s00405-020-06285-0. Epub 2020 Sep 9.
BACKGROUND
From the start of the pandemic, many European otolaryngologists observed an unprecendented number of anosmic patients. Early reports proposed that anosmia could be the first or even the only symptom of COVID-19 infection, prompting calls for self-isolation in affected patients.
METHODS
In the present article, we review the COVID-19 anosmia literature and try to answer the following two questions: first, why is COVID-19 infection responsible for such a high incidence of anosmia? Second, in patients with more severe forms is anosmia really less prevalent and why?
RESULTS
In terms of the etiology of olfactory dysfunction, several hypotheses were proposed at the outset of the pandemic; that olfactory cleft inflammation and obstruction caused a localized conductive loss, that there was injury to the sustentacular supporting cells in the olfactory epithelium or, given the known neurotropic potential of coronavirus, that the virus could invade and damage the olfactory bulb. Olfactory cleft obstruction may contribute to the olfactory dysfunction in some patients, perhaps most likely in those that show very early resolution, it cannot account for the loss in all patients. Moreover, disordered regrowth and a predominance of immature neurons have been shown to be associated with parosmia, which is a common finding amongst patients with Covid-related anosmia. A central mechanism therefore certainly seems to be consistent with the group of patients with more prolonged olfactory deficits. Sustentacular cells showing ACE-2 immunohistochemical expression 200 to 700 times greater than nasal or tracheal epithelia seem to be the main SARS-CoV-2 gateway. As the pathophysiology of COVID-19 anosmia seems to be better understood, the question of why patients with a moderate to severe form of COVID-19 infection have less olfactory involvement remains unresolved. Different potential explanations are discussed in this review.
CONCLUSIONS
The last 5 months have benefited from great international collaborative research, first highlighting and then proving the value of loss of smell and taste as a symptom of COVID-19. Adoption of loss of smell into the case definition by international public health bodies will facilitate control of disease transmission.
背景
从疫情开始,许多欧洲耳鼻喉科医生观察到数量空前的嗅觉丧失患者。早期报告提出,嗅觉丧失可能是 COVID-19 感染的首发症状,甚至是唯一症状,这促使受影响的患者进行自我隔离。
方法
在本文中,我们回顾了 COVID-19 嗅觉丧失的文献,并尝试回答以下两个问题:第一,为什么 COVID-19 感染会导致如此高的嗅觉丧失发生率?第二,在症状更严重的患者中,嗅觉丧失真的不那么常见吗,原因是什么?
结果
就嗅觉功能障碍的病因而言,在疫情开始时提出了几种假设;嗅觉裂炎症和阻塞导致局部传导性丧失,嗅上皮中的支持细胞受到损伤,或者鉴于冠状病毒已知的神经嗜性,病毒可能侵入并损伤嗅球。嗅觉裂阻塞可能导致某些患者的嗅觉功能障碍,也许在那些嗅觉很快恢复的患者中最为明显,但它不能解释所有患者的嗅觉丧失。此外,已经显示嗅觉丧失相关的阵发性嗅觉障碍与不成熟神经元的异常再生和优势有关,这是 COVID-19 相关嗅觉丧失患者的常见发现。因此,一种中枢机制似乎与嗅觉丧失持续时间较长的患者群体一致。支撑细胞表现出比鼻或气管上皮高 200 到 700 倍的 ACE-2 免疫组化表达,似乎是 SARS-CoV-2 的主要入口。随着 COVID-19 嗅觉丧失的病理生理学得到更好的理解,为什么 COVID-19 中度至重度感染患者的嗅觉受累程度较低的问题仍未得到解决。本文讨论了不同的潜在解释。
结论
过去的 5 个月得益于国际间的协作研究,这些研究首先强调了嗅觉和味觉丧失是 COVID-19 的一种症状,然后证明了其价值。嗅觉丧失被国际公共卫生机构纳入病例定义将有助于控制疾病传播。