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Why honing your sense of smell could keep you sharp as you age

A declining ability to detect scents is linked to conditions including 笔补谤办颈苍蝉辞苍鈥檚 and 础濒锄丑别颈尘别谤鈥檚. But restoring our most neglected sense might not only reduce cognitive decline 鈥 studies also show it could even reverse it

By David Robson

19 May 2025

性视界传媒. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Antonio Sortino

I am not normally a fan of lotions and potions, but right now, four small vials sit on my bedside table.

Every morning and every night, I open and sniff each one in turn, savouring the scents as they hit my nostrils. First, the sharp tang of lemon, followed by the abrasive chill of eucalyptus, the sweetness of rose and the metallic warmth of clove.听

My new routine 鈥 training what is, for most of us, a neglected sense 鈥 was inspired by some striking research linking our noses鈥 sensitivity to our cognitive performance. For one thing, studies have shown that the worse your sense of smell is, the worse you perform in cognitive assessments. Olfactory dysfunction has also been linked to more than 100 conditions, including ALS (motor neurone disease), multiple sclerosis, disease, 础濒锄丑别颈尘别谤鈥檚 disease and general age-related cognitive impairment.

And though some of that olfactory impairment is undoubtedly the result of neurological damage, more recent research suggests that smell loss could actually contribute to some conditions. Failing the sniff test may even limit our overall lifespan 鈥 a frightening thought, given how many people lost their sense of smell as a result of the covid-19 pandemic.

鈥淏y middle age, your all-cause mortality can be predicted by your olfactory ability,鈥 says , a neurobiologist at the University of California, Irvine.

Evidence like that has prompted a host of investigations into whether 鈥渟mell training鈥 can reawaken this often-ignored sense and sharpen our minds. So far, research and real-world experience suggest that it can. Our olfactory ability seems to work like a muscle 鈥 the more we use it, the stronger it gets. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e confronted by the data, it’s really hard not to be motivated to do it,鈥 says Leon.

The olfactory myth

Some olfactory impairment is, of course, unavoidable. Global rates of olfactory dysfunction are somewhat difficult to pin down 鈥 one pre-pandemic study of people in the US, for example, found that , while a similar study of people in Sweden found that . Both studies, along with others, find that the incidence of olfactory impairment rises dramatically with age.

Like many people, I had always taken my nose for granted. I certainly didn鈥檛 think I should be exercising it regularly to preserve its health. 鈥淚n surveys, smell is always considered the least important sense,鈥 says , a psychologist at the University of Wroc艂aw in Poland. 鈥淧eople would rather .鈥澨

Our lack of interest may arise from that human 鈥渙lfaction鈥, the scientific term for smell, is simply less developed than that of other animals. This idea first emerged in the late 19th century, when neuroanatomist Paul Broca divided mammals into two categories 鈥 osmatiques, such as dogs, which are guided by their snouts, and anosmatiques, which aren鈥檛. The latter category included cetaceans 鈥 dolphins, porpoises and whales 鈥 and primates.

The mechanism of smell is roughly the same for all mammals: molecules enter the nose and dissolve in the mucus that coats , specialised tissue in the nasal cavity that is densely packed with olfactory receptor neurons. The molecules bind to these receptors, which then send signals through the olfactory nerve to the 鈥渙lfactory bulb鈥 in the brain, the structure right above the nasal cavity where the scent is processed and identified.

Broca鈥檚 principal evidence for his categorisation was variations in the sizes of that olfactory bulb. He had a point: after accounting for relative brain size, a , suggesting that scents play a much bigger role in canine lives. By the 1920s, scientists had started referring to smell as a 鈥渧estigial鈥 sense in humans.

Our sensitivity is in a similar range to dogs, pigs and other animals that are considered 鈥榮uper-smellers鈥

This notion went more or less unchallenged for a century, until in the 2000s. Studies revealed that, with a healthy olfactory system, humans can detect many gases at extremely low concentrations we need just a few molecules to reach the receptors in our nostrils. 鈥淥ur sensitivity is in a similar range to dogs, pigs and other animals that are considered 鈥榮uper-smellers鈥,鈥 says Oleszkiewicz.

GB. England. London. RHS Chelsea Flower Show. 2018.

Researchers are just now finding out how important and powerful our sense of smell is

Martin Parr/Magnum Photos

The oft-repeated wisdom that humans can discern only around 10,000 odours was also shown to be dramatically wrong. In 2014, researchers at Rockefeller University in New York used 128 odorous molecules to produce various scents to test whether participants could notice changes in composition. It turned out that they could do so to a remarkable degree; based on the participants鈥 sensitivity to these different combinations of chemicals, the researchers .

Loss and depression

Unfortunately, many of us don鈥檛 appreciate this rich “smellscape” until it is gone. The most common causes of smell loss are traumatic brain injury, viral infection and sinonasal disease. The olfactory epithelium and the nerves linking our nose to the brain are directly exposed to pollutants and pathogens, making them especially vulnerable to damage.

The results of that damage can be devastating. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e encased in a bubble and the world is going on out there without you,鈥 says Chrissi Kelly, who lost her sense of smell in 2012 following a sinus infection. She soon fell into what she calls a 鈥減rofound depression鈥, . 鈥淚 felt like I’d undergone a personality change,鈥 she says.

A low mood is a natural response to losing a sense that, whether we realise it or not, plays a significant role in how we experience the world. We may not recognise how important aroma is to the , for instance, until it vanishes.听

鈥淵our day becomes a lot less colourful,鈥 says at the Dresden University of Technology in Germany. Hummel鈥檚 research has also found how deeply olfactory dysfunction can affect people dealing with it: in 2022, Hummel and his colleagues tracked 171 participants with a damaged sense of smell over 11 months. They found a clear correlation between over this period 鈥 and when their olfactory function improved, so did their mood.

Olfactory dysfunction also appears to be that cannot be so easily explained, however. Reviewing the evidence, Leon and his colleagues recently documented associated with smell loss, including cardiovascular disease, arthritis, polycystic ovary syndrome and a host of neurological conditions, such as 笔补谤办颈苍蝉辞苍鈥檚 and dementia.

In many of these conditions, smell loss may be a symptom 鈥 high blood pressure might damage the vessels in our nose, for example. When it comes to dementia, however, the direction of causality is less clear, with a wealth of research demonstrating a strong link between olfactory ability and cognitive function.

Between 2011 and 2014, for example, the , Germany, asked about 7000 participants to take various health assessments, including tests of their sensitivity to different odours, their capacity to distinguish between them, and their mental abilities. A clear correlation emerged between the participants鈥 olfactory capacity and their results on the cognitive tests, even after researchers adjusted for factors such as age, education and depressive symptoms 鈥 the weaker the nose, the worse participants scored in verbal fluency, attention, memory and learning. The results prompted researchers to suggest that olfactory testing could be useful in early screening for cognitive impairment.

2N1G54J R. Scott Turner, Professor of Neurology and Director of the Memory Disorder Center at Georgetown University Hospital, points to PET scan results that are part of a study on Allheimer's disease at Georgetown University Hospital, on Tuesday, May 19, 2015, in Washington. Amyloid plaques are the Alzheimer?s culprit that gets all the attention. Now scientists are beginning to peer into the brains of people considered at high risk of getting Alzheimer?s to see if the disease?s other bad actor, tangle-forming tau, is lurking well before any memory symptoms begin. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Loss of smell is correlated with the future development of Alzheimer’s, but researchers are investigating whether that link is actually causal

AP Photo/Evan Vucci/Alamy

Other studies have come to similar conclusions. In 2021, psychologists at San Diego State University in California examined the health records of 497 people. They found that people鈥檚 performance on odour sensitivity and identification tests . Quite remarkably, the olfactory tests were shown to be a better predictor of the condition鈥檚 progression than the Mini Mental State Examination, an assessment that is widely used to identify who is at risk of dementia.

A major risk factor

Based on these findings, some researchers have come to suspect that lost smell sensitivity is actively contributing to the brain鈥檚 deterioration. Leon offers two good reasons why.

The first concerns the brain鈥檚 wiring. Vision, hearing and touch first pass through a neural relay station known as the thalamus, located deeper within the brain, before reaching the outer layers associated with higher-level thinking. 鈥淭he thalamus is like a railroad hub,鈥 says , a psychologist at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. 鈥淓verything arrives there, then it鈥檚 processed and distributed through the brain.鈥

Smells, however, go straight to the olfactory bulb. Embedded in the forebrain, the bulb has direct links to many other areas of the cortex that are involved in emotional processing and regulation, decision-making, memory and learning, including the amygdala, the orbitofrontal cortex and the hippocampus. 鈥淭he olfactory system is the only sense with a 鈥榮uperhighway鈥 to the memory centres and the emotional centres of the brain,鈥 says Leon.

This fast track to the cortex may explain . And when that superhighway is broken, we lose a potent source of mental stimulation that would otherwise help keep our neurons happy and healthy.

Brain scans support this idea. Olfactory dysfunction is accompanied by and the wiring that passes messages within it. As you might expect, the most pronounced changes can be seen in the olfactory bulb itself 鈥 but many other regions shrink alongside it, including the and . Such changes may explain both the cognitive decline and the rising depression in such people: 鈥淪mell loss interferes with the affective and emotion control systems,鈥 says Hummel.听

Leon鈥檚 second hypothesis concerns inflammation. The body naturally raises inflammation to protect us from infection. If it remains too high for too long, however, it can cause damage to our organs 鈥 and is known to be .

Pleasant odours 鈥 such as eucalyptus, lavender, ginger, citrus and peppermint 鈥 have been shown to suppress inflammation

He points to evidence showing that certain odours can rapidly provoke the immune system. Mats Olsson at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden and his colleagues asked participants to sniff and then rate the chemicals that give rotten eggs, fermented herrings, urine and vomit their disgusting odours. Afterwards, they swabbed the participants鈥 saliva and measured the levels of certain inflammatory molecules. The resulting paper, published in December 2022, : the fouler the stench, the higher the levels of inflammation, suggesting that the scents primed the oral cavity with a 鈥減reparatory immune response鈥 to potential pathogens. Meanwhile, pleasant odours 鈥 such as , , , and 鈥 have been shown to suppress inflammation, although exactly why is unclear.

A healthy nose may, therefore, help keep our immune system in check, raising inflammation when it perceives a potential threat to our health and lowering it when it senses we are in a safe environment. Olfactory dysfunction throws this out of balance, leading to chronically high inflammation that ultimately damages the brain.

The ability to smell our surroundings can also help us avoid environments that trigger inflammation. 鈥淏ad odours predict bad things and so it’s a good idea to stay away from them,鈥 says Leon. If our noses lose their sensitivity, we may not be so good at making those calls, potentially increasing our exposure to pollutants and pathogens that might cause more damage to our nose and brain.

GLASTONBURY, ENGLAND - JUNE 24: A girl holds her nose from the stench of rubbish and toilets in the mud, after a thunderous night of heavy rain during the Glastonbury Music Festival held at Worthy Farm on June 24, 2005 in Glastonbury, England. (Photo by Jim Dyson/Getty Images)

Bad odours can be a warning sign to our bodies and brains to avoid whatever’s producing them

Jim Dyson/Getty Images

Animal studies are helping to pick apart these threads 鈥 and they strongly suggest that the olfactory system plays a crucial role in the development of dementia. Researchers at the University of Navarra in Spain, for instance, found that exposing mice that were genetically programmed to develop the equivalent of 础濒锄丑别颈尘别谤鈥檚 to the sweet smell of menthol . These benefits were completely absent, however, in animals with a damaged nasal cavity.

Mohammad Reza Raoufy at Tarbiat Modares University in Tehran, Iran, and his colleagues also recently reported that , improving cognition and preventing dementia.

Get a brain boost

Could we achieve the same results simply by paying a bit more attention to our noses? That鈥檚 the aim of various commercially available smell-training programmes. These kits usually require users to sniff a variety of aromatic compounds 鈥 such as clove, eucalyptus, rose and lemon 鈥 for a few minutes each day, over a few weeks or months.

There is good evidence that smell training of this kind can improve olfactory abilities. 鈥淲hen we expose ourselves to odours, we become more sensitive,鈥 says Hummel, who pioneered studies into smell training. In 2009, he and his colleagues recruited 56 people with olfactory dysfunction. Forty were assigned smell training over 12 weeks, during which they were told to sniff each of the four odours described above for at least 10 seconds twice a day and to keep a weekly diary of their experiences. 鈥淚f you ask people to do something on a routine basis, it needs to be super simple,鈥 says Hummel. Despite this very low time investment, subsequent tests revealed , while a control group saw no change.

Other, subsequent trials suggest that . A 2016 study of people with post-infectious olfactory dysfunction, for example, found that more than 70 per cent of people who trained for 56 weeks experienced significant improvement, compared with 58 per cent of those who trained for 15 weeks.

Crucially, the training also brings a brain boost. Vance and his colleagues recently reviewed the , finding 18 controlled trials that offered promising evidence that it really can slow or even reverse some signs of cognitive decline. A few of these experiments also revealed neurological changes, including growth in regions like the hippocampus. 鈥淣eurons that fire together, wire together,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o you have all that neuroplastic input that creates a lot of changes in the brain.鈥

We may not even need to be awake to reap the benefits. Leon recently invented a commercially available device called , which puffs out 40 different scents as the user sleeps. A small trial that on 43 people aged 60 to 85 found a 226 per cent improvement in verbal memory after six months of nightly use. 鈥淭here have been billions of dollars spent on trying to find ways to improve memory, and it turns out that you can improve it with just giving olfactory enrichment,鈥 says Leon.听

In trying to regain her lost sense of smell, Kelly trialled an experimental treatment that involved injecting blood cells called platelets into her nose to help regenerate the tissue. The platelet injections did improve her sense of smell slightly, she says, but consistent smell training had already helped return some of her lost sensitivity: 鈥淪mell training and smell awareness is a constant part of my daily life, and I have no doubt that it has played an important role.鈥

The restoration of her sense of smell hasn鈥檛 just recoloured Kelly鈥檚 world; it has brightened and enlivened it. 鈥淥nce you are in the habit, your world is so full,鈥 she says. 鈥淓verything in your house smells. Every book has a different smell, your tea towel, even your keys.鈥 In line with the scientific research, this has enhanced her sensory memory, says Kelly. 鈥淚t’s like getting into Narnia, you know? You walk into the wardrobe, move the coats out of the way and pretty soon, you can feel the snow crunching under your feet.鈥 Based on her experiences, she has founded the , an online community for people with smell loss.

It was Kelly鈥檚 experience that finally convinced me to give smell training a go myself. When I looked back on my childhood, I realised that smell was as vivid as any other sense. Cut grass, wet earth, the instant coffee I鈥檇 sprinkle on top of my hot chocolate 鈥 I lived in a vibrant smellscape. As the years have passed, however, my sensitivity seems to have waned, and I notice odours less and less. It is as if my world has moved from multicolour through to greyscale 鈥 and that doesn鈥檛 bode well for my brain as I enter my fifth decade.

I purchased my vials of lemon, clove, eucalyptus and rose online and now sniff them in both the morning and evening.

After a few weeks, I鈥檝e already noticed more flashes of odour entering my consciousness in the hours between each exercise, a glimpse, I hope, of a richer 鈥 and smellier 鈥 future.

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