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UEA scientists sniff out a solution for loss of smell – Norfolk Eastern Daily Press

Posted: April 8, 2017 at 11:40 pm

PUBLISHED: 19:20 06 April 2017 | UPDATED: 19:20 06 April 2017

Carl Philpott who runs the smell and taste clinic at the Norwich Medical School at the UEA. Picture: ANTONY KELLY

Archant Norfolk 2016

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A new study by Norfolk scientists may have uncovered a way of combating the condition with a substance usually used to treat bladder issues.

A study by the University of East Anglia (UEA) and the Smell and Taste clinic at Gorlestons James Paget University Hospital has shown a sodium citrate nasal spray could help patients suffering from anosmia - the total loss of smell - or hyposmia - partial loss of smell. Sodium citrate, the sodium salt of citric acid, is safe to use and already licensed for medicinal uses in the stomach and bladder.

Carl Philpott from the UEA said: The sodium citrate nasal spray was designed to mop up calcium molecules in nasal mucus and as a result, temporarily turn up the sense of smell.

An inability to smell can affect everything from eating food to countryside walks to personal relationships.

Mr Philpott said: In the randomised trial, patients were treated either with sodium citrate spray or sterile water. They were then invited to take part in a series of tests, smelling increasingly stronger concentrations of four different odours roses, pear, vinegar and menthol, noting at what concentration they could detect the smell.

Sodium citrate is known to bind calcium. Calcium molecules are key in cell function, and are believed to be involved in turning down the sense of smell.

Researchers wanted to investigate if reducing calcium in the mucus in the nose would suppress its ability to inhibit a persons sense of smell.

Promising results

Mr Philpott said results showed an improvement in those treated with the spray, which lasted for up to two hours.

It seemed to be most effective in people whose ability to smell was damaged by viral infection, called post viral olfactory loss or PVOL.

The loss of smell can have a significant impact on sufferers. It can often lead to reduced intake of nutritional food and weight loss as well as affecting personal relationships, social enjoyment and having a negative impact on psychological wellbeing.

Of the patients randomised to be treated with sodium citrate spray, one third showed an improvement with the peak effect seen between 15 and 30 minutes after treatment. Minor side effects noted by patients included a sore throat, slightly runny nose and itching.

Mr Philpott said: This study offers proof of concept that sodium citrate spray may enhance a damaged sense of smell in patients with partial loss of smell not caused by obstructions.

Further study in the form of larger clinical trials with patients applying the treatment regularly would help inform whether this treatment should be offered routinely by doctors. It could quite easily and safely be formulated into a treatment to provide temporary relief from smell loss, enhancing the quality of life of patients with very few side effects.

The research was done in UK by a team led by Mr Philpott and mirrors work done in Germany by Professor Thomas Hummel at the Dresden Smell and Taste Clinic.

The report, A randomised controlled trial of sodium citrate spray for non-conductive olfactory disorders is published in the journal Clinical Otolaryngology, DOI: 10.1111/coa.12878 - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/coa.12878/abstract

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UEA scientists sniff out a solution for loss of smell - Norfolk Eastern Daily Press


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