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NYU Medical associate professor Dr. Devi Nampiaparampil discusses a 'medical bias' with positive COVID test results.Researchers in Sweden are trying to learn more about the long-term impact that the first wave of COVID-19 infections had on individuals who lost their sense of smell when they first learned they had the virus.Scientists at Stockholm’s Karolinska Institute studied 100 people who came down with the virus in 2020 and found that nearly half had a level of distortion in their sense of smell, 18 months after recovering, the Guardian reported. (David Santiago/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)The Guardian’s report said the research has not been peer-reviewed but about 65% of people who recovered showed some long-term impact on their sense of smell.GET THE FOX NEWS APP"Given the amount of time since [the] initial insult to the olfactory system, it is likely that these olfactory problems are permanent," the researchers said, according to the paper.The Associated Press contributed to this reportEdmund DeMarche is a senior news editor for FoxNews.com.
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