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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, June 6, 2015
Losing sense of smell linked with earlier deat

By Rachael Rettner
People
who have problems with their sense of smell may be at increased risk
for dying sooner than those who don't have trouble smelling, a new study
suggests.
Researchers analyzed information from more than 1,100 adults in New York
City whose average age was 80. The participants took a "scratch and
sniff" test in which they attempted to identify 40 common odors. People
who scored less than 18 points out of 40 were said to have anosmia, or
an inability to smell.
The study found that the people with scores in the low range (zero to 20
points) were nearly four times more likely to die over a four-year
period than those with scores in the high range (31 to 40 points). About
45 percent of participants with scores in the low range died during the
study period, compared with 18 percent of those with scores in the high
range. [7 Ways the Mind and Body Change with Age]
The results held even after the researchers took into account factors
that could affect people's risk of death, such as age, alcohol use, head
injury, smoking or having dementia.
Therisk of death "increased progressively with worse performance in the
smell identification test and was highest in those with the worst
smelling ability," study co-author Dr. Davangere Devanand, a professor
of psychiatry and neurology at Columbia University, said in a statement.
The results agree with those of a study published last year, which also
found a link between smell loss and an increased risk of dying in older
adults.
People tend to perform worse on smell tests as they age, and impairments
in sense of smell have been linked with Alzheimer's and Parkinson's
disease. But the new study suggests that dementia and other medical
conditions, by themselves, are not enough to explain the link between
problems with smell and increased risk of death.
The researchers noted that a loss of sense of smell could put people at
risk for certain hazards, such as ingestion of spoiled food or an
inability to smell a natural gas leak or a fire.
A loss of a person's sense of smell may also mean that the cells in the
individual's body are not able to regenerate as well as they used to
(since the cells responsible for smell detection regenerate throughout
life). This could put a person at higher risk of death from other
causes.
There remains a need for larger studies looking at whether other factors
may explain the link, the researchers said. More work is also needed to
determine if the same link can be found in younger populations, the
researcher said.
The study is published today (June 3) in the journal Annals of Neurology.
