Abstract
Given the need for a clinical classification for daily patient examinations to refer to each type of quantitative alteration in the sense of smell, we have created a topographic classification of such alterations, establishing groups to distinguish among patients with decreased or total loss of olfaction. Because the classification is based on the diagnosis of the different causes of anosmia, it implicitly includes etiologic and topographic considerations. We have established 3 main groups on the basis of the site of the causal lesion: conduction, sensorineural, and mixed anosmias. In addition, within the sensorineural anosmias, we distinguish between the epithelial, retroepithelial, and central anosmias.
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