Experience: after getting Covid, everything I eat tastes like rotting flesh - This lady is upset that she doesn't want to gorge her fat ass anymore

I rarely feel hungry and only eat when I feel I should – food smells are physically repulsive
Kimberley Featherstone, whose sense of taste and small has been affected by Covid, standing in her kitchen

Kimberley Featherstone: ‘It was a total assault on my senses.’ Photograph: Rebecca Lupton/The Guardian

Kimberley Featherstone
Fri 4 Feb 2022 05.00 EST


Icaught Covid in October 2020, and lost my sense of smell and taste. Back then I worked in a school, so catching the virus felt inevitable. At first, I didn’t think too much about it: anosmia (loss of sense of smell) is a common symptom of the virus. After four weeks or so, and a brief stint in hospital, I regained some of my ability to taste things: salty, sour, sweet. My nose was still misbehaving, but my tongue was starting to slowly whirr back into action. I thought I was on the mend.

By the middle of December, however, things started to get strange. In the house, I was certain I kept smelling stale ashtrays. I’m not a smoker, so it made no sense. Then I started smelling exhaust fumes. I looked online and found other people reporting similar experiences of phantosmia (smelling of odours that aren’t there). I’d be consumed by these aromas even in pure, clean air.

It was a total assault on my senses: morning to night I had a repugnant fragrance in my nostrils. I’d drive my family to distraction, asking if they could smell it, too, and struggled to rustle up an appetite. Occasionally, out of the blue, I’d be blasted with a strong smell of fresh lilies, which was a welcome relief. Sadly, having flowers around the house had no effect. The smells stayed for about two months. Towards the end of 2020, I’d become used to my new condition: things were still a little wonky, but you adapt.

Sign up to our Inside Saturday newsletter for an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the making of the magazine’s biggest features, as well as a curated list of our weekly highlights.

In early 2021, I was eating batch-cooked spaghetti bolognese with my kids when I realised the sauce didn’t taste right. I assumed it had spoiled, so we stopped eating it immediately. The next time I had red meat, however, I encountered the same problem. It wasn’t long before nearly everything I ate, and soon smelled, was revolting to me. Simple cooking smells made me retch, violently; if my food had been anywhere near an onion, I’d feel physically sick.

Things smelled and tasted like rotting flesh. Imagine an animal had crawled into your greenhouse in the height of summer, died, and you discovered it two weeks later. That’s what, day in and day out, filled my nose and mouth. I would open the fridge and be certain something was decomposing; my mum received frequent requests to come over and give things a sniff.
There are only a few things I can safely eat – cold pasta, yoghurt, bananas – without throwing up
I searched for bland food, settling for a simple ready-meal macaroni cheese. Soon that, too, became impossible for me to eat without nearly – and sometimes actually – vomiting. It turned out it had onion powder in it. Peppers, garlic, fried foods and meats – they all induced the same reaction. By April, half a year after my initial Covid diagnosis, there was only a handful of things I could safely eat – cold plain pasta, bananas, yoghurt and cereal – without throwing up. It’s the same to this day. Since August 2021, I’ve rarely felt hungry. I only eat when I feel I should. When I do, it’s far from pleasant.

When lockdown restrictions lifted and I ventured into town, I realised it was a bigger problem. At home I could control my environment, but smells are everywhere on the street: traffic, perfume, takeaways. I couldn’t face going for a meal or to the cinema, and setting foot in a supermarket was a gamble, too. Swimmer’s nose plugs help, though they are uncomfortable and look ridiculous. I use them so I can make meals for my family. I’ve also started trimming down foam earplugs and lodging them in my nostrils.
Wilf Davies, in a cardigan with a bucket in each hand, surrounded by sheep on his farm
Experience: I’ve had the same supper for 10 years
Read more

You don’t realise how heavily food features in life until it becomes an issue; weddings, funerals, the Christmas “do”. I’m happy to go along and not eat, but people stare and it feels awkward. Instead, I turn down invitations. I miss cooking and baking. Now I barely eat 500 calories a day, but I haven’t lost any weight. When you’re overweight your doctors aren’t too bothered that you’re not eating enough.

The worst part, medically speaking, is that my condition is still a bit of a mystery. There’s not even a definitive consensus as to why it happens. I’ve met others online who are suffering like me – it feels as if we have been forgotten. Until there’s a cure, which may never happen, it’s a waiting game. Will I one day wake up and find my senses have returned to normal? I honestly have no idea.

As told to Michael Segalov
 
While I had COVID, every single thing with vinegar in it smelled and tasted strongly of ammonia and hot glue. SARS-CoV-2 100% does attack the olfactory nerve's supporting tissues. It can actually alter gene expression in those tissues pertaining to olfactory receptor function, too.


It is now widely known that COVID-19 is associated with the transient or long-term loss of olfaction (the sense of smell) but the mechanisms remain obscure. An unresolved question is whether the olfactory nerve can provide SARS-CoV-2 with a route of entry to the brain. Scientists at the Max Planck Research Unit for Neurogenetics in Frankfurt in collaboration with physicians and scientists at the University Hospitals Leuven (Leuven, Belgium) and a major hospital in Bruges, Belgium, together with scientists at NanoString Technologies Inc. in Seattle, USA, report that SARS-CoV-2 does not appear to infect the sensory neurons of the olfactory epithelium in COVID-19 patients. Moreover, the team failed to find evidence for infection of olfactory bulb neurons. Instead, the sustentacular cells, also known as supporting cells, are the main target cell type for the virus in the olfactory epithelium. Since SARS-CoV2 spares olfactory sensory neurons and olfactory bulb neurons, it does not appear to be a neurotropic virus.


To gain insight into COVID-19-induced smell loss, the current authors explored the molecular consequences of SARS-CoV-2 infection in golden hamsters and in olfactory tissue taken from 23 human autopsies. Hamsters represent a good model, being mammals that both depend more on the sense of smell than humans, and that are more susceptible to nasal cavity infection.

The study results build on the discovery over many years that the process which turns genes on involves complex 3-D relationships, where DNA sections become more or less accessible to the cell's gene-reading machinery based on key signals, and where some DNA chains loop around to form long-range interactions that enable the stable reading of genes. Some genes operate in chromatin "compartments"—protein complexes that house the genes—that are open and active, while others are compacted and closed, as part of the "nuclear architecture."

In the current study, experiments confirmed that SARS-CoV-2 infection, and the immune reaction to it, decreases the ability of DNA chains in chromosomes that influence the formation of olfactory receptor building to be open and active, and to loop around to activate gene expression. In both hamster and human olfactory neuronal tissue, the research team detected persistent and widespread downregulation of olfactory receptor building. Other work posted by these authors suggests that olfactory neurons are wired into sensitive brain regions, and that ongoing immune cell reactions in the nasal cavity could influence emotions, and the ability to think clearly (cognition), consistent with long COVID.
 
While I had COVID, every single thing with vinegar in it smelled and tasted strongly of ammonia and hot glue. SARS-CoV-2 100% does attack the olfactory nerve's supporting tissues. It can actually alter gene expression in those tissues pertaining to olfactory receptor function, too.




Yeah what covid does to nerves is actually quite spooky. There will likely be thousands of people that will be unable to enjoy smells or tastes for the rest of their lives because of it. Sad, honestly.
 
In early 2021, I was eating batch-cooked spaghetti bolognese with my kids when I realised the sauce didn’t taste right. I assumed it had spoiled, so we stopped eating it immediately.
This part right here makes me doubt the whole story. Not that she had anosmia or dysgeusia or whatever, but that it's lasted two years and has been so bombastic and perfect for writing up the exact kind of cautionary tale that happens to further the MSM's existing narrative.

Why, you ask? Well, let me ask you this. Say you have known for a year that your sense of taste is messed up. You eat spaghetti, and it tastes messed up. Is your first instinct to immediately throw away your entire family's spaghetti, no further discussion allowed? Probably not, because you are not a made up character in a fake story.

Although I do have to credit her realism for writing in an absentee father
 
I had a similar experience when I had covid, I was drinking a lot of juice and water, I had some fruit punch that I like to drink and I poured a glass and took a sip and it tasted like straight shit. Certain foods I would taste nothing, sometimes it would be insanely salty even though I didn't put any salt on the food. Luckily my normal sense of smell and taste is finally starting to return.
 
Man, that's gotta suck if Covid fucks up your sense of taste and smell like that.

I gotta say though, the whole loss of taste bit of getting Covid is the strangest thing. In my experience, it seemed like I could still barely taste things but only on the edges of my tongue. I also had this weird expectation that my tongue was supposed to be numb every time I ate. Everything came back fine in the end. I guess my fat ass got lucky and only contracted some lesser strain.
 
Back