Scientific Reports (Feb 2022)

Self-reported symptom study of COVID-19 chemosensory dysfunction in Malaysia

  • Shen-Han Lee,
  • Zhi Xiang Yeoh,
  • Ida Sadja’ah Sachlin,
  • Norzi Gazali,
  • Shahrul Aiman Soelar,
  • Chee Yoong Foo,
  • Lee Lee Low,
  • Sharifah Baizura Syed Alwi,
  • Tengku Mohamed Izam Tengku Kamalden,
  • Jothi Shanmuganathan,
  • Masliza Zaid,
  • Chun Yiing Wong,
  • Hock Hin Chua,
  • Suhaimi Yusuf,
  • Dzawani Muhamad,
  • Philip Rajan Devesahayam,
  • Hong Bee Ker,
  • Zulkiflee Salahuddin,
  • Mahiran Mustafa,
  • Halimuddin Sawali,
  • Heng Gee Lee,
  • Sobani Din,
  • Nor Arisah Misnan,
  • Amran Mohamad,
  • Mohd Noor Ismail,
  • Chenthilnathan Periasamy,
  • Ting Soo Chow,
  • Elang Kumaran Krishnan,
  • Chee Loon Leong,
  • Linda Pei Fang Lim,
  • Nor Zaila Zaidan,
  • Mohd Zambri Ibrahim,
  • Suhaila Abd Wahab,
  • Siti Sabzah Mohd Hashim,
  • Malaysian COVID-19 Anosmia Research Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-06029-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Alterations in the three chemosensory modalities—smell, taste, and chemesthesis—have been implicated in Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19), yet emerging data suggest a wide geographic and ethnic variation in the prevalence of these symptoms. Studies on chemosensory disorders in COVID-19 have predominantly focused on Caucasian populations whereas Asians remain understudied. We conducted a nationwide, multicentre cross-sectional study using an online questionnaire on a cohort of RT-PCR-confirmed adult COVID-19 patients in Malaysia between 6 June and 30 November 2020. The aim of our study was to investigate their presenting symptoms and assess their chemosensory function using self-ratings of perceived smell, taste, chemesthesis, and nasal blockage. In this cohort of 498 patients, 41.4% reported smell and/or taste loss when diagnosed with COVID-19, which was the commonest symptom. Blocked nose, loss of appetite, and gastrointestinal disturbances were independent predictors of smell and/or taste loss on multivariate analysis. Self-ratings of chemosensory function revealed a reduction in smell, taste, and chemesthesis across the entire cohort of patients that was more profound among those reporting smell and/or taste loss as their presenting symptom. Perceived nasal obstruction accounted for only a small proportion of changes in smell and taste, but not for chemesthesis, supporting viral disruption of sensorineural mechanisms as the dominant aetiology of chemosensory dysfunction. Our study suggests that chemosensory dysfunction in COVID-19 is more widespread than previously reported among Asians and may be related to the infectivity of viral strains. Study Registration: NMRR-20-934-54803 and NCT04390165.