People With Alzheimer's Genes May Lose Sense of Smell First

smell
smellAdobe Stock
Published on
Updated on

Key Takeaways

  • In people genetically predisposed to Alzheimer's disease, the inability to smell and identify what you smell may be an early sign of dementia to come

  • This association with smell is not seen in people without a certain gene variant, researchers say

  • Reduced smell became apparent at ages 65 to 69. Inability to identify smells emerged at ages 75 to 79

WEDNESDAY, July 26, 2023 (HealthDay News) -- People who carry a gene that's associated with Alzheimer’s disease may lose their sense of smell long before memory and thinking problems occur, a new study suggests.

This early sign of potential dementia is not seen in people who don't carry this gene, called APOE e4, researchers report July 26 in the journal Neurology.

"Testing a person’s ability to detect odors may be a useful way to predict future problems with cognition," said researcher Dr. Matthew GoodSmith, a resident at the University of Chicago.

"While more research is needed to confirm these findings and determine what level of smell loss would predict future risk, these results could be promising, especially in studies aiming to identify people at risk for dementia early in the disease," GoodSmith added in a journal news release.

For the study, the researchers surveyed more than 865 people about their ability to detect an odor and identify what they were smelling. Tests were given over five years. Those with memory or thinking problems were tested twice, five years apart. The investigators also took DNA samples.

People who carried the gene variant for Alzheimer’s were 37% less likely to have good odor detection than people without the gene, the researchers found. Those with the gene experienced reduced smell detection from age 65 to 69. At that age, gene carriers could detect an average of about three of the test smells, compared with about four smells for the people who lacked the gene, the researchers found.

People with the gene variant did not show a difference in the ability to identify what they were smelling until ages 75 to 79. Once the ability to identify odors declined, it declined faster than in those who did not carry the gene.

At the start of the study, thinking and memory skills were similar among the two groups. Not surprisingly, the researchers said, thinking skills declined more rapidly among those carrying the gene variant than among those without the gene.

"Identifying the mechanisms underlying these relationships will help us understand the role of smell in neurodegeneration," GoodSmith said.

More information

The Alzheimer's Association has more on the signs of dementia.

SOURCES: Neurology, news release, July 26, 2023

What This Means For You

Based on these new findings, it's conceivable that doctors may someday test your ability to detect odors as a way to predict future problems with thinking and memory.

Related Stories

No stories found.
logo
www.healthday.com