Anosmia in a sentence as a noun

It's interesting that you should mention smell, since I was born without a sense of smell - the term is anosmia.

I have congenital anosmia, and all the research I've done says that losing your sense of smell is serious.

I had a genuine case of anosmia after recovering a regular cold.

It was very different from every year that I got the 'flu and I experienced anosmia, which never happened before.

Trust me, I know the difference between being unable to smell/taste because your nose is blocked, and actual anosmia where you can breathe normally but the sense is just gone.

* Is there a correlation between measures of disease severity and anosmia in Covid-19?

> “I can taste strong spices,” she said, “but still no lemon or herbs.”Hah, that resonated with me. I've had anosmia since birth, and I had a moment this week where I was chewing on rosemary to gauge what its impact on my dish would be, and thought to myself "I really don't get herbs".

I was specifically thinking of anosmia and ageusia.

Do they cause brain damage, reproductive damage, anosmia without congestion, strokes, and unusual clotting activity?

In our cases, though, this symptom appeared almost immediately and stuck with us throughout the infection, so I don't think it's fair to generalize about when anosmia is likely within the course of the virus.

* Is there a correlation between disease severity of other viruses that trigger chronic fatigue symptoms and incidences of CFS?The anosmia question seems relevant if we assume that the virus damages the nervous system.

Anosmia definitions

noun

absence of the sense of smell (as by damage to olfactory nasal tissue or the olfactory nerve or by obstruction of the nasal passages)