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canetoad

(21,365 posts)
Wed Jul 15, 2026, 10:36 PM 21 hrs ago

How 'smell training' can boost your brain and flag dementia risk

Stopping to smell the roses is good life advice. And research suggests it may have an added benefit: it could be a good way to improve your brain health.

The loss of the sense of smell is often one of the first warning signs of neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease even up to a decade before there are other diagnosable symptoms. Overall, 90 per cent of people with early-stage Parkinson’s and 85 per cent of those with early-stage Alzheimer’s have olfactory dysfunction, according to a 2021 paper in Ageing Research Reviews.

Experts believe losing our sense of smell, or olfaction, may be a biomarker of declining brain health and are working to make smell testing more commonplace to speed up a diagnosis.

“If someone has horrible olfaction, that seems to be like the canary in the mine where it’s a bellwether that there might be some cognitive problems that may occur later on,” says David Vance, a psychologist and professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

https://www.theage.com.au/lifestyle/health-and-wellness/how-smell-training-can-boost-your-brain-and-flag-dementia-risk-20260715-p60ff7.html

https://archive.md/EHp4F

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How 'smell training' can boost your brain and flag dementia risk (Original Post) canetoad 21 hrs ago OP
I would add decline of sense of taste as it's connected to the sense of smell. no_hypocrisy 14 hrs ago #1
I had a brief mild case of Covid back in 2022 FakeNoose 7 hrs ago #2

FakeNoose

(43,487 posts)
2. I had a brief mild case of Covid back in 2022
Thu Jul 16, 2026, 12:02 PM
7 hrs ago

That's the only time in my life that I can remember losing taste or smell for about 3 days. I wonder whether Covid is any kind of trigger for dementia? Maybe later in life ... I don't know. But it's a scary thought.

Many young people have survived Covid in the last 5 years, thinking there would be no lingering, lasting effects.

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