A fractured cribriform plate (anterior skull trauma) can result in leaking of cerebrospinal fluid into the nose and loss of sense of smell. Smell plays a large role in the perception of taste. So, in practice, a patient may complain of loss of taste rather than of smell.
brownielove79can it be a facial nerve??? with lateral head trauma (injury during passage through middle ear, or external auditory canal??) doubt!!!+2
doodimoodiOlfaction is actually more important that tongue sensation in terms of food taste (think of how food tastes bland when you have a cold)+2
champagnesupernova3If taste is completely lost then it's an olfactory issue. If its lost only on a part of the tongue then the nerve that provides taste to that area is suspected.+14
veryhungrycaterpillarUWorld QID 12227
The sense of taste isn't lost due to CSF in the nose, but due to avulsion of olfactory rootlets.+13
topgunberyeah i wanted something to do with chorda tympani but i guess its something to remember +
submitted by โhayayah(1212)
A fractured cribriform plate (anterior skull trauma) can result in leaking of cerebrospinal fluid into the nose and loss of sense of smell. Smell plays a large role in the perception of taste. So, in practice, a patient may complain of loss of taste rather than of smell.