Anosmia
Anosmia refers to olfactory (smell) loss and can be unilateral or bilateral1.
Testing
Testing Unilateral Anosmia
Bilateral Anosmia
- Most patients are aware of bilateral anosmia and may even report decreased taste due to olfaction’s contriution to the perception of flavor1.
Possible Causes of Anosmia
- Head trauma
- Viral infection
- Nasal obstruction
- Neurodegenerative conditions
- Frontal lobe lesions
Head Trauma
- Trauma to the head can cause anosmia by damaging the olfactory nerves as they penetrate the cribriform plate of the ethmoid1.
Obstruction
- Obstruction of the nasal passages can impair olfaction1.
Neurodegenerative Conditions
- Bilateral anosmia is also seen in Kallmann syndrome (anosmic hypogonadism)1
- Parkinson’s disease1
- Alzheimer’s disease1
Frontal lobe Lesions
- Intracranial lesions that occur at the base of the frontal lobes near the olfactory sulci can interfere with olfaction1.
- Possible lesions in this location include meningioma, metastases, basal meningitis, or less commonly sarcoidosis, a granulomatous inflammatory disorder that occasionally involves the nervous system, often causing cranial neuropathies1.
- Frontal lobe deficits are often difficult to detect clinically, especially with small lesions1.
- As a result, lesions at the base of the frontal lobes can sometimes grow very large while still causing little symptoms except besides anosmia.
- Large lesions of the olfactory sulcus region, especially meningiomas, can cause Foster Kennedy syndrome where the patient experiences anosmia, ipsilateral optic atrophy (d/t tumor compression), and contralateral papilledema (d/t elevated intracranial pressure)1.
References
1.
Blumenfeld H. Neuroanatomy Through Clinical Cases. 3rd ed. Oxford university press; 2022.
Citation
For attribution, please cite this work as:
Yomogida N, Kerstein C. Anosmia. https://yomokerst.com/The
Archive/Signs and Symptoms/Neuro Symptoms/anosmia.html