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Anesthesia reactions to food and alcohol

I have had anesthesia for a inguinal hernia and have a general decrease in food taste. In addition alcohol effects are increased. 


Answer:

There are some reports of change in the sense of taste or smell after anesthesia but this problem has, to my knowledge, never been properly studied. In other words, we don't know whether such changes have occurred by chance and have nothing to do with the anesthesia, or whether they are truly a result of the anesthesia. 

There are many possible causes for a decrease in food taste including the common cold. If the changes persist you should seek the help of an ENT specialist (ear, nose and throat doctor). 

People who have had anesthesia are advised not to drink alcohol immediately before or afterwards. Alcohol can increase the effects of anesthesia, and anesthesia can increase the effects of alcohol. If your anesthesia was very recent (within 24 hours or so), then you may very well find that a small drink goes a long way! If you are well past the 24 hour period, an increased sensitivity to alcohol could conceivably be a result of the anesthetic, particularly if you are elderly. However it is much more likely due to other factors such as medicines you may be on, including pain killers. 

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Lost sense of taste

I had hand surgery 7-8 months ago and have not had any taste since then. I seem to have a bit of heightened sense of smell though. I had general anesthesia and the surgery took about an hour longer than they anticipated. I have had tests to rule out any brain or other disorders. If it was nerve damage from the tube, I understand that the nerve heals about an inch a month. It has now been about 7 and half months. Any ideas what I can do to regain my taste. This is very depressing and I have lost a lot of weight. 


Answer:

ᅠIt sounds as though you've been told that the anesthetic 7-8 months ago had something to do with your unfortunate loss of taste. My own belief is that this is unlikely. There are a few reports of this type of problem after general anesthesia but no clear proof that the one causes the other, and no explanation of how anesthesia might cause loss of taste or smell. Although you say you have a heightened sense of smell, keep in mind that what we think of as taste is mostly (about 80%) due to the sense of smell. It would be very unusual for you to have an improved sense of smell together with a loss of the sense of taste. Your sense of smell can be affected by blockage of airflow to the areas of the nose where olfaction (smell) takes place. This can be due to sinusitis or allergies, or such things as polyps or tumors in the nose. The breathing tube you had during an anesthetic for hand surgery would not have been placed in the nose, but rather in the mouth. To knock out the taste areas, located mainly on the tongue, you would have to seriously damage both of the lingual nerves. For something like this to be the outcome of a normal anesthetic seems very, very unlikely. The other main cause of loss of smell is damage or decreased function of the olfactory nerves, anywhere from the nose through to its connections in the brain. Examples include loss of smell after upper respiratory infection, head injury, depression, liver disease, "toxins", Alzheimer's disease, and multiple sclerosis. Diabetes, smoking, high blood pressure and any one of a hundreds of different medicines may also cause problems. Although we are learning new things all the time about the effects of anesthetic drugs on the brain and nerves, anesthetic drugs have not been proven to cause permanent loss of taste or smell. Even with a prolonged anesthetic these drugs are cleared from the system within hours. One key fact is that there is a gradual loss of the senses of taste and smell with aging, with a particularly abrupt decline in the sixth and seventh decade of life. Another important fact is that respiratory infection is the most frequent (25%-33%) cause of nerve-related loss of smell. This type of loss more commonly affects women (70%-80% of cases), and is more frequent in people 65 years or more of age. One third of patients will improve after 6 months, but the longer the loss of function is present, the less the chances of recovery because the lining of the nose that contains the special nerve cells for smell can be permanently damaged by certain viruses. So, here's a scenario. A person in his sixties or seventies (the people most likely to receive general anesthesia) whose sense of taste is beginning to decline gets a viral respiratory infection that permanently damages the smell receptors. If he or she happens to have a general anesthetic around this time it would be natural, in the absence of any other obvious explanation, to put two and two together - the anesthetic caused the loss of taste or smell. Two statistically common events coincide, and, wrongly, the one is attributed to the other. If you have more questions ask your doctor for a referral to an ENT doctor who specializes in this type of disorder and can identify treatable causes such as nasal polyps. In about 5% of patients without symptoms of polyps (such as nasal congestion), polyps are discovered to be the cause of disordered smell or taste. 

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Loss of taste with general anesthesia

I had a hip replacement one month ago. I seem to have lost my sense of taste since this surgery. It is slowly coming back but not yet back to my baseline. Is this possibly due to the anesthesia? If so, can you explain the pathophysiology. Thanks in advance. 


Answer:

Although this is not the first time I've been asked this question I'm still not aware of any links between anesthesia and the loss of the sense of taste after surgery. I suspect this is a random coincidence and I cannot explain, even in theory, how it might occur. Hip replacement surgery is usually done with regional (epidural or spinal) anesthesia, not general anesthesia, which would make it even harder to explain any connection. 

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