I wonder if it dulls other senses the opposite of blind people who develop more sensitive hearing.
Sounds like an amazing product that I would want to buy. I probably chew 20 sticks of gum a day.
I know this is probably just a bit of "editorial spice" because it's an obvious example for "what would you do if you could eat anything" I guess, but I thought capsaicin/spicyness was NOT a taste-perception thing. Isn't more of a pain feeling? I would've assumed you would retain that, while losing the olfactory perception you need for flavours.
I am no expert in this sort of thing, so if anyone knows I'd be genuinely curious about why COVID would affect both of those senses.
It came back very slowly, and unevenly. My coffee/chocolate taste is still quite dim.
Of all the possible smells to lose, why did it have to be those?
It took 10 days to get rid of the flu like symptoms, two weeks to get to semi normal, but my taste hasn't been the same since. Not entirely gone, but very muted.
If these gums were available off the shelf I would buy them in a heartbeat!
How long ago? Covid vaccine efficacy drops significantly over time so if you haven't had a booster recently, you are not vaccinated: https://www.nih.gov/news-events/nih-research-matters/why-pro...
The heat sensation from capsaicin was unaffected. I was eating a lot of vegetable bowls at the time. Adding spiciness was the only that kept them palatable.
There were a few tastes that I could dully perceive but, stupidly, I didn't make notes about what they were.
I can recall one thing that I didn't like: I tried peanut butter, which I typically find delicious, and found it a horrifyingly disgusting soulless paste. It made me wretch. It was awhile, even after I got my sense of smell back, before I could eat it.
I don't believe my sense of smell has recovered to my pre-COVID capability. This story is very interesting to me.
Covid is a weird virus. I'd be really curious about the mechanism behind this. I'm sure it's nothing great, like some sort of nerve damage, but at least in my friend's case he and his senses made a full recovery as far as he can tell.
I'd definitely try this gum.
Not totally sure I fully believe it; but it seemingly worked for me.. shrug
The only “sensation” I had eas texture which I found very gross without flavor.
It was like that for about 2 months and it slowly came back over another 5 maybe 6. Salty was the first thing I noticed.
5 years later and I still don’t smell coffee, gas or a few other things. It’s weird walking down the coffee isle at the store and not smelling it at sll
I didn't feel like looking up how to spell allyl isothiocyanate when writing my initial comment. Maybe I should have! I've edited it for clarity, since it's an important distinction which adds to why I'm so danged curious about the mechanism behind my friend's temporary inability to perceive pungency. I also see how my original wording may have implied I was conflating the two, so I've expanded on my friend's experience a bit. He experimented with pepper and radish based spice sources in his pantry.
It's powerfully off-putting, isn't it? I had no idea tasteless texture would be so upsetting.
I hope this treatment becomes something I can partake of personally. I find that I'm using a lot more salt than I used to trying to make up for lack of taste. I switched to a potassium salt substitute to try to reduce my sodium intake.
But also, outside of Japan, 95% of the time the stuff with your sushi isn't wasabi, it's green-colored horseradish-and-mustard paste.
so unexpected that i had to look it up; turns out you're right: https://chefcoca.com/blogs/food-service-equipment-resources/...
A dad who lost his sense of taste and smell for years after catching covid has had both senses restored – thanks to specially-developed chewing gum.
The revolutionary clinical trial at the University of Nottingham saw a group of participants chew flavoured chewing gums for 12 weeks.
The specially-developed gums had different super-strength flavours – including spicy, minty, sour and sweet.
The successful pilot study, designed by Dr Nicole Yang, aimed to encourage repair of brain connections associated with smell and taste.
One such participant was Dr Paul Wicks, 44, who lost his taste and smell after catching covid in August 2022 – and it never came back.
Dr Paul Wicks. (Pix via Dr Paul Wicks / SWNS)
The dad-of-two, from Litchfield, Staffordshire, could eat the spiciest curries with no effect, and couldn’t smell a thing when he changed nappies.
But he longed to smell his favourite smells – coffee beans, shaving cream, his favourite foods, and his children’s hair.
After just six weeks of the 12-week trial starting in November 2024, Paul noticed his sense of taste and smell returning – and says it has now been restored to what it was before covid.
Paul, a medical researcher, said: “My sense of smell and taste went with covid – and never came back.
“I couldn’t smell anything when taking out the bins or changing nappies – but I also found it sad that everything smelled like nothing.
“Your memory formation is influenced by smells – birthday cakes, your dog, things from your childhood. I was concerned I wasn’t making good memories, especially with my kids and wife.
“For the first few weeks of the trial I didn’t notice anything, until I tasted a blueberry in my oats for breakfast one day and this sweet flavour exploded.
“That was the first time I had tasted my breakfast in years.
“Over the weeks I started being able to taste and smell things again, and now I’m back to where I was pre-covid. I feel great.
“Now one of the highlights of my week is refilling my coffee machine with beans.
“When you lose something and then get it back, it gives you a new appreciation. I literally stop and smell the roses.”
Dr Paul Wicks. (Pix via Dr Paul Wicks / SWNS)
Paul first learned about the trial thanks to the charity SmellTaste, for people with impaired smell and taste.
There were 16 people on the pilot and 67% saw their sense of smell improved – and 83% reported an improvement in their taste.
The decentralised clinical trial – meaning it was done from home instead of at the research facility – saw participants being given specially formulated chewing gums.
Paul said: “The theory Nicole [Yang] had was that if you want to train yourself to distinguish flavour, you have to eat things.
“The chewing gums were specially formulated to keep their flavour for longer, and actually change flavour as you chew.
“The flavours were formulated to hit different combinations – like sweet, salty, sour, cooling menthol, a spicy one.”
Paul chewed the gums every morning and every evening, and after six weeks noticed the change when he ate a blueberry for breakfast.
A few days later it was confirmed when he went over dog poo with his lawnmower.
Dr Paul Wicks. (Pix via Dr Paul Wicks / SWNS)
Dr Paul Wicks. (Pix via Dr Paul Wicks / SWNS)
He said: “The dog poo and cut grass assaulted my senses – but it gave me hope something was working.
“Over the next six weeks I started being able to taste food, smell my kids’ hair after the shower, and smell my deodorant.
“And by the end of the trial, I had clinically significant improvements.”
Paul added: “I’d pretty much accepted I’d never get my taste or smell back.
“Once I had gone for a nice meal for my birthday and they brought out all this lovely food and wine, and I couldn’t smell or taste any of it.
“The world felt a bit grey.
“Now, I still say ‘hooray!’ whenever I smell the bin – until I have to empty it.”
The team at University of Nottingham, headed up by Dr Yang, are now hoping to secure funding for a larger trial.