By Dr. Liji Thomas, MD Even after the virus disappears, some people continue to experience altered taste. New research ...
A new study provides the first direct biological evidence explaining why some people continue to experience taste loss long after recovering from COVID-19.
Some individuals have experienced a loss of taste long after a COVID-19 infection has subsided. Researchers from the Swedish ...
Researchers identify a reduction in the PLCβ2 protein as the cause for long-term sweet, bitter, and umami taste loss in post-COVID patients.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. While many patients who went through a bout of COVID-19 did complain of deadened senses of taste and smell, the new study finds ...
Learn how researchers may have finally uncovered why some people experience long-lasting taste loss after COVID-19.
Researchers found reduced PLCβ2 and structural damage in taste buds of long-term post-COVID patients. Sweet, bitter, and umami signaling were impaired, while salty and sour pathways stayed intact, ...
(NEW YORK) — Doctors and researchers still have much to learn about the exact symptoms caused by COVID-19, but a group of ear, nose and throat doctors now suspect two such symptoms may be an altered ...
In mild to moderate cases of coronavirus, a loss of smell, and therefore taste, is emerging as one of the most unusual early signs of the disease called Covid-19. "What's called anosmia, which ...
Tracy Messina knew something was wrong the day she couldn't smell her tea. She asked her husband, Marcus, to make a cup of apple cinnamon, but when he brought it over, she couldn't pick up any of the ...
I am a 49-year-old woman who recently had COVID. When I was sick with it, I lost my sense of taste and smell. I no longer ...