Bhutani S, Coppin G, Veldhuizen M G, Parma V, Joseph P V
School of Exercise and Nutritional Sciences, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA.
Department of Psychology, Formation Universitaire à Distance (UniDistance), Brig, Switzerland; Swiss Center for Affective Sciences, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
medRxiv. 2021 Mar 3:2021.02.28.21252536. doi: 10.1101/2021.02.28.21252536.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Individuals with obesity show alterations in smell and taste abilities. Smell and taste loss are also the most prominent neurological symptoms of COVID-19, yet how chemosensory ability present in individuals with obesity with a positive COVID-19 diagnosis is unknown.
SUBJECTS/METHODS: In this secondary analysis of a cross-sectional global dataset, we compared self-reported chemosensory ability in participants with a respiratory illness reporting a positive (C19+; n = 5156) or a negative (C19-; n = 659) COVID-19 laboratory test outcome, who also self-reported to be obese (C19+; n = 433, C19-; n = 86) or non-obese.
Compared to the C19- group, C19+ exhibited a greater decline in smell, taste, and chemesthesis during illness, though these symptoms did not differ between participants with obesity and without obesity. In 68% of participants who reported recovery from respiratory illness symptoms (n=3431 C19+ and n= 539 C19-), post-recovery chemosensory perception did not differ in C19+ and C19- diagnosis, and by self-reported obesity. Finally, we found that all chemosensory and other symptoms combined predicted the C19+ diagnosis in participants with obesity with a moderately good estimate (63% accuracy). However, in C19+ participants with obesity, we observed a greater relative prevalence of non-chemosensory symptoms, including respiratory as respiratory and GI symptoms.
We conclude that despite a presumed lower sensitivity to chemosensory stimuli, COVID-19 respondents with obesity experience a similar self-reported chemosensory loss as those without obesity, and in both groups self-reported chemosensory symptoms are similarly predictive of COVID-19.
背景/目的:肥胖个体的嗅觉和味觉能力会发生改变。嗅觉和味觉丧失也是新冠病毒病(COVID-19)最突出的神经症状,但肥胖且COVID-19检测呈阳性的个体的化学感觉能力如何尚不清楚。
受试者/方法:在对一个全球性横断面数据集的二次分析中,我们比较了呼吸道疾病患者自我报告的化学感觉能力,这些患者的COVID-19实验室检测结果为阳性(C19+;n = 5156)或阴性(C19-;n = 659),他们也自我报告为肥胖(C19+;n = 433,C19-;n = 86)或非肥胖。
与C19-组相比,C19+组在患病期间嗅觉、味觉和化学感觉下降更明显,不过这些症状在肥胖和非肥胖参与者之间并无差异。在报告已从呼吸道疾病症状中康复的68%的参与者中(n = 3431名C19+和n = 539名C19-),康复后C19+和C19-诊断组以及自我报告的肥胖情况在化学感觉感知方面没有差异。最后,我们发现所有化学感觉和其他症状综合起来对肥胖参与者的C19+诊断有中度良好的预测能力(准确率63%)。然而,在肥胖的C19+参与者中,我们观察到非化学感觉症状的相对患病率更高,包括呼吸道和胃肠道症状。
我们得出结论,尽管推测肥胖者对化学感觉刺激的敏感性较低,但肥胖的COVID-19患者自我报告的化学感觉丧失情况与非肥胖者相似,并且在两组中自我报告的化学感觉症状对COVID-19的预测能力相似。