Volume 115, Issue 1 p. 24-28
Centennial Series

Anosmia and Chronic Sinus Disease

Laura L. Downey MD

Laura L. Downey MD

Department of Otolaryngology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York

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Joseph B. Jacobs MD

Corresponding Author

Joseph B. Jacobs MD

Department of Otolaryngology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York

Reprint requests: Joseph B. Jacobs, MD, Department of Otolaryngology, NYU Medical Center, 550 First Ave., New York, NY 10016.Search for more papers by this author
Richard A. Lebowitz MD

Richard A. Lebowitz MD

Department of Otolaryngology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York

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First published: July 1996
Citations: 4

Abstract

Chronic sinus disease associated with progressive mucosal disease is often a cause for anosmia. Despite aggressive allergic, medical, and surgical intervention, long-term relief of anosmia has been difficult to document. Fifty patients sought treatment for subjective anosmia and symptoms of progressive sinusitis and underwent endoscopic sinus surgery. After surgery 52% maintained significant improvement in smell by subjective measures that correlated with objective olfactory University of Pennsylvania Small Identification test (‘UPSIT’) results. Of the remaining patients, some had intermittent improvement, but most remained hyposmic or anosmic despite clinically well-healed ethmoid surgical beds. Of the preoperative and postoperative historical, clinical, and radiological data analyzed, severity of the presenting sinus disease (defined as stage II in the Kennedy staging criteria or disease extending beyond the ethmoids on preoperative computed tomography scan) and persistent mucosal disease in the surgical bed are associated with persistent anosmia (p = 0.005).