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Investigating olfactory dysfunction in COVID-19

November 2021
KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium(1)
Max Planck Research Unit for Neurogenetics, Frankfurt, Germany(2)
This study investigates the mechanisms underlying the loss of smell as a symptom of COVID-19. Therefore, samples of respiratory and olfactory mucosae and whole olfactory bulbs were obtained endoscopically after the death of the patients. 70 COVID-19 patients, including patients that died a few days after infection during the replication phase of the virus, and 15 control cases were included in the study. RNA of tissue sections was investigated via in-situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry was performed for codetection of proteins. Moreover, whole-transcriptome profiling was done. No evidence for infection of olfactory sensory neurons and the tissue of the olfactory bulb was found. Thus, SARS-CoV-2 does not appear to be a neurotropic virus and it is postulated that a transient insufficient support from infected sustentacular cells triggers olfactory dysfunction in COVID-19. This may yield strategies for therapeutic interventions for olfactory dysfunction in COVID-19.
Visualizing in deceased COVID-19 patients how SARS-CoV-2 attacks the respiratory and olfactory mucosae but spares the olfactory bulb
Laura Van Gerven(1), Peter Mombaerts(2)
#1711
Added on: 01-06-2023
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