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Marlene M. Speth

Researcher at University Hospital Regensburg

Publications -  31
Citations -  764

Marlene M. Speth is an academic researcher from University Hospital Regensburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 24 publications receiving 471 citations.

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Olfactory Dysfunction and Sinonasal Symptomatology in COVID-19: Prevalence, Severity, Timing, and Associated Characteristics.

TL;DR: OD is highly prevalent during COVID-19, occurring early and severely, often in conjunction with loss of taste, and is associated negatively with older age and positively with female sex.
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Sinonasal pathophysiology of SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19: a systematic review of the current evidence

TL;DR: A systematic review, synthesizing existing scientific evidence about sinonasal pathophysiology in COVID‐19, finds the role of the nasal and paranasal sinus cavities is increasingly recognized for CO VID‐19 symptomatology and transmission.
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Olfactory Dysfunction: A Highly Prevalent Symptom of COVID-19 With Public Health Significance.

TL;DR: Current evidence shows that OD is highly prevalent in COVID-19, with up to 80% of patients reporting subjective OD and objective olfactory testing potentially showing even higher prevalence, and Assessing for sudden-onset anosmia may increase sensitivity of COIDs screening strategies, in particular for identifying patients at the earliest stages of disease.
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Mood, Anxiety and Olfactory Dysfunction in COVID-19: Evidence of Central Nervous System Involvement?

TL;DR: The objective of this study was to determine the burden of depressed mood and anxiety in COVID‐19, and associated disease characteristics.
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Changes in chronic rhinosinusitis symptoms differentially associate with improvement in general health-related quality of life.

TL;DR: Changes in the severity of sleep and ear/facial discomfort symptoms associate most greatly with the change in general health-related QOL that CRS patients experience during routine medical management, and reduction of these extranasal symptoms of CRS may lead to the greatest improvement ingeneral health- related QOL.