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People receive temperature checks as they wait in line to receive the COVID-19 vaccine at a mass vaccination site in a parking lot for Disneyland Resort on Jan. 13, 2021, in Anaheim, California. The loss of taste and smell — hallmarks of a coronavirus infection early in the pandemic — became a stubborn blight for many long COVID-19 sufferers, but new research shows that the sensory problems gradually abate. (Mario Tama/Getty Images/TNS)
People receive temperature checks as they wait in line to receive the COVID-19 vaccine at a mass vaccination site in a parking lot for Disneyland Resort on Jan. 13, 2021, in Anaheim, California. The loss of taste and smell — hallmarks of a coronavirus infection early in the pandemic — became a stubborn blight for many long COVID-19 sufferers, but new research shows that the sensory problems gradually abate. (Mario Tama/Getty Images/TNS)
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Jason Gale | Bloomberg News (TNS)

The loss of taste and smell — hallmarks of a coronavirus infection early in the pandemic — became a stubborn blight for many long COVID-19 sufferers, but new research shows that the sensory problems gradually abate.

Smell and taste disturbances were reported in almost two-thirds of the 100 people who had caught a mild case of COVID-19 in the fall of 2020 in Trieste, Italy, and were randomly selected for studying alongside 100 uninfected people for comparison. Both groups were followed for three years.

About a quarter of the COVID-19 cases couldn’t taste properly a year after the acute illness but, after two years, there was little difference between them and controls. The research, published Thursday in a letter to the journal JAMA Otolaryngology, suggests that so-called gustatory dysfunction, linked to the taste bud-damaging immune response to lingering vestiges of SARS-CoV-2 in the tongue, resolves faster than problems with smell.

More than a quarter of the COVID-19 group still experienced olfactory dysfunction two years after infection, but after three years, the condition wasn’t significantly more common than in controls, the researchers found.

That’s reassuring for the 28 million Americans estimated to have endured a worse sense of smell after COVID-19. Far from a benign inconvenience, a coronavirus-induced sensory upheaval can make people not want to eat, leading to depression and weight loss, and prevent the detection of harmful gas and smoke.

“A recovery of olfaction appears to continue over three years,” Paolo Boscolo-Rizzo, a researcher at the University of Trieste, and colleagues wrote. “These results can be generalized to individuals of white race who experienced mild symptoms during the early waves of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The complication has become less common since the omicron variant became the predominant cause of COVID-19 at the end of 2021. Scientists have long sought to understand the cause of the impairment, which has been linked to certain genetic variations, and neurological manifestations and damage to olfactory support cells.

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