
A partial or total loss of smell—called anosmia—can happen for many reasons—including having COVID-19. Loss of smell can also affect your sense of taste. In fact, the two senses are so closely connected that people who are losing their sense of smell often mistakenly believe they are losing their sense of taste.
A loss of smell is most often temporary, depending on the cause.
Anosmia Causes
Many conditions can temporarily or permanently cause anosmia. More rarely, a decreased sense of smell can signal the start of a serious condition such as Alzheimer’s disease or Parkinson’s disease. Some people are born with a diminished or heightened ability to smell as compared to others. In general, our ability to smell may wax and wane over our lifetime, and most of us begin to lose our sense of smell after the age of 60. Studies also show that women tend to have a more accurate sense of smell than men.
In addition to a diminished sense of smell and taste, people who suffer from anosmia may also have other symptoms, depending on the cause of their anosmia. These symptoms vary widely. You should report any unusual symptoms to your healthcare provider, even if you don’t think they’re relevant, since they may indicate an underlying condition.
COVID-19 and Loss of Smell
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says loss of smell—or anosmia—may be a sign of COVID-19 infection. If you suspect you or a loved one may be sick, contact your healthcare provider. Learn more about COVID-19, including how it’s diagnosed and answers to common questions you may have.
If you’re concerned that you may be losing your sense of smell, it’s likely you have a common and temporary condition. Keep in mind that each individual and case is different, so whether or not your diminished sense of smell persists will depend on your individual circumstances.
The following conditions can cause anosmia that is often temporary or reversible:
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Allergies
Congestion from colds or upper respiratory infections
Dental problems or oral surgery
Deviated septum
Nasal polyps (often must be treated surgically)
Sinusitis
Temporary fluctuations in hormone levels
Vitamin deficiencies or malnutrition (rare)
The loss of smell due to some conditions or risk factors may be reversible, partially reversible, or permanent. For example, once a person quits smoking, their sense of smell usually improves—but how much the ability to smell returns is variable.
Medication side effects that cause loss of smell may be temporary or permanent, depending on the medication.
Nasal Sprays and Loss of Smell
Zinc nasal sprays are known to cause permanent anosmia. Breathing in chemicals or environmental pollutants has been known to cause permanent anosmia as well.
The use of cocaine or other drugs that are snorted up the nose can also cause anosmia. Like smoking, a person’s ability to smell may or may not return when the drug is stopped or may only partially return.
The list of medications that may alter a person’s ability to smell or taste is very long, but it includes many:
Antibiotics
Antidepressants
Blood pressure medications
Heart medications
Associated Conditions
Many conditions often cause a permanent loss of a person’s sense of smell. Again, keep in mind that each case is different, and some people may regain their sense of smell even with these conditions, though many do not. Brain injuries (head trauma) may cause anosmia, as can disorders that affect the nervous system, including:

Parkinson’s disease
Multiple sclerosis
Alzheimer’s disease
Radiation treatment to the head and neck may also cause anosmia.
Some other conditions that may cause anosmia include:
Adrenocortical insufficiency syndrome
Cerebral vascular accident (stroke)
Cushing’s syndrome
Diabetes
Epilepsy
Kallmann’s syndrome
Hypothyroidism
Psychiatric conditions
Sjögren’s disease
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Tumors of the brain, sinus cavities, or nose
Turner syndrome
Diagnosis
Your healthcare provider will review your medical history as well as any current symptoms you might be having. Your practitioner will probably also perform a physical exam. If warranted, a healthcare provider will order blood tests to rule out risk factors, such as infections or hormonal disturbances, or a computerized tomography (CT) scan or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to diagnose nasal polyps or tumors.
The Scratch-and-Sniff Test
A healthcare provider may administer a scratch-and-sniff test where you will be asked to identify certain smells.
Treatment
As mentioned above, many conditions that can diminish your sense of smell are reversible, but it depends on the root cause of your condition. Nasal polyps or deviated septums can be treated surgically, sinusitis can sometimes be treated with antibiotics, and allergies can be treated with medications. If the anosmia is a side effect of a medication you are taking, the medication should be stopped. There is no medication or treatment specifically designed to improve or bring back your sense of smell, but finding the cause of the anosmia and resolving the underlying issue is successful in many cases. In some cases, the sense of smell may return gradually.
When to See a Healthcare Provider
Any unexplained loss of smell that lasts longer than a cold virus probably should be checked out by a healthcare provider. Call your practitioner immediately if your inability to smell comes on suddenly and is accompanied by other worrisome or strange symptoms. Go to the emergency room if you lose your sense of smell and experience neurological symptoms such as dizziness, slurred speech, or muscle weakness.
SOURCE: VERYWELLHEALTH.COM
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The Grinch?
A distant galaxy? No, just my campfire in the snow.
This crane looks like it’s wearing sneakers.
Sleeping black cat or a portal to another universe?
A real driving dog!
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clever pictures!!
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I love optical illusions!
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Evening light on a wood table makes it look like Alaska’s Kachemak Bay is pouring into the window.
There’s a hole in the cat!
Headstand?
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great pictures!
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Is the cat going up or down the stairs?
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LOLOLOLOLOL
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Donald J. Trump:
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very clever!
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EXCERPT: “Casey Means, President Donald Trump’s pick for surgeon general, does not yet have the votes for confirmation following a testy Senate health committee hearing on her nomination Wednesday. Senators of both parties pressed Means on her views about vaccines at the hearing. Means did not commit to promoting them and now has to convince at least two skeptical Republicans to back her nomination: Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, who told POLITICO they haven’t decided how they’ll vote.
Winning the approval of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee is almost certainly a prerequisite for confirmation. The panel is split between 12 Republicans and 11 Democrats, so any one Republican could sink Means’ chances if Democrats, as expected, vote against.
The Republican-controlled Senate has turned back very few of Trump’s nominees. But one of the first was Trump’s pick to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Like the surgeon general, the CDC director serves within the health department. The White House withdrew the nomination of former Florida GOP Rep. Dave Weldon last March after Murkowski and Collins raised concerns about his vaccine views. The surgeon general is the nation’s top doctor and a high profile spokesperson on public health.”
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/02/26/surgeon-general-casey-means-vaccines-nomination-rfk-00801331
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“The Pentagon, Anthropic, and The Battle For AI Control: Effective Altruists think they should set the rules for how governments use AI.”
Jordan Schachtel, Feb 27, 2026
EXCERPT: “The Effective Altruism movement’s core premise is that you can calculate the objectively correct moral position through reason and evidence. That’s fine as a philosophical framework. The problem comes when people holding that framework think it gives them authority to override constitutional processes or impose their “calculations” on others.
The Effective Altruist movement dominates the AI space, and it is inundated with executives who believe they have superior moral reasoning and should therefore have outsized influence over civilizational decisions. And that’s exactly what’s happening with Anthropic in its campaign to dictate its moral framework upon the government, and the Trump Administration’s pushback to that initiative.
After weeks of back and forth between the major AI company and the War Department over the use of its technology for certain applications, President Trump unleashed on Anthropic Friday afternoon:
We shall see if President Trump will follow through on that order to have all Federal agencies in the Government to stop using Anthropic’s technology. President Trump, at his core, is a dealmaker. So this is likely the fiery opening salvo in a back and forth with Anthropic.
This comes on the heels of Secretary of War Pete Hegseth giving Anthropic an ultimatum: drop the AI restrictions for military applications by Friday, or lose your $200 million Pentagon contract and face designation as a supply chain risk under the Defense Production Act (DPA). The Trump Administration has also threatened to invoke the DPA to force Anthropic’s compliance, though this may be more negotiating leverage than serious policy.
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, a man deeply connected to the Effective Altruist network, the same executive who left OpenAI over “safety concerns,” is now drawing red lines. The company insists it won’t budge on two issues: AI-controlled autonomous weapons systems and mass domestic surveillance of American citizens. They say that AI isn’t currently reliable enough to operate weapons autonomously, and there are no laws governing how AI could be used in mass surveillance.
Noble stance, right? The principled AI company standing up to the “military-industrial complex.” Except there’s a problem with this narrative.
Just before this Pentagon showdown, Anthropic announced it was loosening its core safety framework, known as the Responsible Scaling Policy, which it had championed for two years, due to commercial competition. They admitted that maintaining strict “safety” standards would “hinder its ability to compete in a rapidly growing AI market.”
https://us.cnn.com/2026/02/25/tech/anthropic-safety-policy-change
So when there’s money on the line from enterprise customers, safety standards are, in fact, negotiable. But when it comes to helping the American military maintain technological superiority over China, suddenly Anthropic discovers uncompromising principles…..”
https://www.dossier.today/p/the-pentagon-anthropic-and-the-battle
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Yeah! I’ve got my first red-headed wood pecker! More and more birds every day. Gorgeous day! I’ve had the patio door standing open for several hours now but the exterior temp has dropped to 68 so I’ll need to close it soon – it made it to 72 earlier. Lovely taste of spring!
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we never got that warm! but 40* is still good for us here.
I finally got the next month’s opens loaded!
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Good night, Pat!
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Good Night Filly!
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Good night All!
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