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Smell, part 1


G’day Dr Karl here,
Now love songs and poems have been written to the beauties of the lips, eyes and even the cheekbones of the human face. But for the poor old nose, the only options are to pay through it, or else keep it to the grindstone.
We see our human sense of smell as woefully inadequate compared to other animals – but that is totally incorrect. Even worse, the loss of smell can be quite disabling or even dangerous.
Awareness of our sense of smell has become more of a hot topic recently with the COVID-19 pandemic. A significant number of people who get the virus lose their sense of smell early on. It seems that  a loss of smell can be a very good early sign of COVID-19 infection. ....

United States , Karl Kruszelnicki , Dr Karl , Great Moments In Science , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , டாக்டர் கார்ல் , நன்று தருணங்கள் இல் அறிவியல் ,

Smell, part 2


G’day, Dr Karl here.
This story tells more about how under-rated our sense of smell really is – and how loss of smell can be an early indicator of COVID-19.
As an aside, a loss of smell can be deeply linked to some neuro-degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer s and Parkinson’s disease, as well as several autoimmune diseases.These include Systemic Lupus Erythematosis SLE, Sjogren’s Disease, and many more.
Why? Well, it turns out that in your DNA, many of the genes associated with smell are located right next to a big bunch of genes that form your immune system, the so-called Major Histocompatibility Complex. Maybe this is the link.     ....

Systemic Lupus Erythematosis , Major Histocompatibility , Spike Proteins , Karl Kruszelnicki , Dr Karl , Great Moments In Science , Covid 19 , Olfactory Epithelium , ஸ்பைக் ப்ரோடீந்ஸ் , டாக்டர் கார்ல் , நன்று தருணங்கள் இல் அறிவியல் ,

Months after contracting COVID-19, some will try anything to regain their sense of smell


Brittny Mejia
Los Angeles Times
Dogs are being trained to sniff out people who are COVID-19 positive by picking up the particular smell of sweat from their armpits. Veuer’s Sean Dowling has more.
In her quest to overcome one of COVID-19 s strangest symptoms, Mariana Castro-Salzman was willing to try anything.
The 32-year-old visited an oncologist and got a CT scan of her head. She saw an ear, nose and throat doctor. Took steroids. Went to a neurologist who put her on anti-anxiety medication.
She began sniffing essential oils every day. A homeopath prescribed bath flowers, supplements and chaga mushrooms. ....

United Kingdom , United States , Eagle Rock , Chula Vista , Santa Monica , Los Angeles , La Jolla , Bozena Wrobel , Mariana Castro Salzman , Susan Robbins Newirth , Brooke Adams , Brittny Mejia Los Angeles , Stevie Gibbs , Mel Melcon , Pamela Dalton , Jay Piccirillo , Viviana Villase , Centers For Disease , Los Angeles Times , Monell Chemical Senses Center , Washington University School Of Medicine , Keck Medicine , Disease Control , Washington University School , Robbins Newirth , Loz Feliz ,

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20131006:14:45:00

About 5 million sensors in our nose. dogs, on the other hand, have 200 million. and the brain and olfactory are connected. the science behind this starts from 2004. james walker from florida university started doing this in melanoma, and one out of two cases, they were able to detect it. in 2006, they tried this with lung cancer. he s right. 90% of the time, they were able to find it and the dogs came through. that dog is named ohlund. he knows me by my first name. how do they train the dogs? what is the reward? they take a piece of tissue or ovarian tissue and they threw these derivatives, they train them, then they tried to confuse them and go back and find exactly 9 out of 10 times, dogs ....

200 Million , 5 Million , Lung Cancer , James Walker , Florida University ,

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20131006:20:45:00

Nose. dogs, on the other hand, have 200 million. and the brain and olfactory are connected. the science behind this starts from 2004. james walker from florida university started doing this in melanoma, and one out of two cases, they were able to detect it. in 2006, they tried this with lung cancer. he s right. 90% of the time, they were able to find it and the dogs came through. that dog is named ohlund. he knows me by my first name. how do they train the dogs? what is the reward? they take a piece of tissue or ovarian tissue and they threw these derivatives, they train them. then they basically try to confuse them and then go back and find exactly nine out of ten ....

James Walker , Florida University , 200 Million , Lung Cancer ,