WASHINGTON: Older adults who have trouble identifying common odours are more than twice as likely as those with a normal sense of smell to develop dementia within five years, a study has found.
Researchers at University of Chicago in the US conducted a long-term study of nearly 3,000 adults, aged 57 to 85 years.
They found that those who could not identify at least four out of five common odours – peppermint, fish, orange, rose and leather – were more than twice as likely to develop dementia within five years.
The team found that although 78 per cent of those tested were normal – correctly identifying at least four out of five scents – about 14 per cent could name just three out of five.
Five per cent could identify only two scents, two per cent could name just one, and one per cent of the participants were not able to identify a single smell.
Researchers noted five years after the initial test, almost all of the study subjects who were unable to name a single scent had been diagnosed with dementia.
Nearly 80 per cent of those who provided only one or two correct answers also had dementia, with a dose-dependent relationship between degree of smell loss and incidence of dementia.
“Loss of the sense of smell is a strong signal that something has gone wrong and significant damage has been done,” said Jayant M Pinto, professor at the University of Chicago.
The study, published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, used a well-validated tool, known as “Sniffin’Sticks.”
These look like a felt-tip pen, but instead of ink, they are infused with distinct scents. Study subjects smell each item and are asked to identify that odour, one at a time, from a set of four choices.
The five odours, in order of increasing difficulty, were peppermint, fish, orange, rose and leather.
Researchers noted that 78.1 per cent of those examined had a normal sense of smell, 48.7 per cent correctly identified five out of five odours and 29.4 per cent identified four out of five.
They noted that 18.7 per cent, considered “hyposmic,” got two or three out of five correct and the remaining 3.2 per cent, labelled “anosmic,” could identify just one of the five scents or none.
The olfactory nerve is the only cranial nerve directly exposed to the environment, researchers said.
The cells that detect smells connect directly with the olfactory bulb at the base of the brain, potentially exposing the central nervous system to environmental hazards such as pollution or pathogens. Olfactory deficits are often an early sign of Parkinson’s or Alzheimer’s disease.
They get worse with disease progression, researchers said. (AGENCIES)
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SPO-HOCK-WOM
India ‘A’ women’s hockey team go down 0-7 to New South Wales
PERTH, Sept 30:
India A women’s hockey team was handed a humiliating 0-7 defeat by New South Wales (NSW) in a one-sided contest at the 2017 Women’s Australian Hockey League here.
In what was only the second match in their maiden appearance, India A failed to even put up a fight against a strong NSW.
NSW took a 3-0 lead in the first quarter of the match itself to put the Indian eves on the back foot.
Field goals by Emily Smith (2nd minute), Courtney Schonell (6th minute) and Jaime Hemmingway (12th minute) gave NSW an early edge over the visitors.
Jessica Watterson added another goal to NSW’s tally in the 18th minute, taking their overall lead to a dominating 4-0 in the second quarter.
India, however, seemed to recover from the early setback as they put up a controlled defence in the following minutes, which restricted NSW forwards from making easy forays into the visitors’ circle.
The change in defence-approach paid off as India kept NSW from scoring goals in the remaining minutes of the second and third quarters.
On the other hand, breaking the NSW defence was a tough task for Preeti Dubey & Co. And repeated attempts by the Indian forwards to make successful circle penetrations were mired by a well-structured defence.
In the final 15 minutes, NSW increased the intensity of their attack. A major error in the circle saw India give away a penalty stroke in the 46th minute, which was successfully converted by Kaitlin Nobbs.
Another penalty stroke given away in the 48th minute saw NSW take their total number of goals to six with Emily Smith converting it.
But the agony was still not over for the Indians as Abigail Wilson netted another field goal in the 52nd minute to make it 7-0.
India A will play South Australia in their next Pool B encounter on Monday. (AGENCIES)