PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Detecting sickness by smell

2014-01-23
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Anna Mikulak
amikulak@psychologicalscience.org
202-293-9300
Association for Psychological Science
Detecting sickness by smell Humans are able to smell sickness in someone whose immune system is highly active within just a few hours of exposure to a toxin, according to new research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

According to researcher Mats Olsson of Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, there is anecdotal and scientific evidence suggesting that diseases have particular smells. People with diabetes, for example, are sometimes reported to have breath that smells like rotten apples or acetone.

Being able to detect these smells would represent a critical adaptation that would allow us to avoid potentially dangerous illnesses. Olsson wondered whether such an adaptation might exist already at an early stage of the disease.

"There may be early, possibly generic, biomarkers for illness in the form of volatile substances coming from the body," explains Olsson.

To test this hypothesis, Olsson and his team had eight healthy people visit the laboratory to be injected with either lipopolysaccharide (LPS) — a toxin known to ramp up an immune response — or a saline solution. The volunteers wore tight t-shirts to absorb sweat over the course of 4 hours.

Importantly, participants injected with LPS did produce a noticeable immune response, as evidenced by elevated body temperatures and increased levels of a group of immune system molecules known as cytokines.

A separate group of 40 participants were instructed to smell the sweat samples. Overall, they rated t-shirts from the LPS group as having a more intense and unpleasant smell than the other t-shirts; they also rated the LPS shirt as having an unhealthier smell.

The association between immune activation and smell was accounted for, at least in part, by the level of cytokines present in the LPS-exposed blood. That is, the greater a participant's immune response, the more unpleasant their sweat smelled.

Interestingly, in a chemical assay the researchers found no difference in the overall amount of odorous compounds between the LPS and control group. This suggests that there must have been a detectable difference in the composition of those compounds instead.

While the precise chemical compounds have yet to be identified, the fact we give off some kind of aversive signal shortly after the immune system has been activated is an important finding, the researchers argue. It grants us a better understanding of the social cues of sickness, and might also open up doors for understanding how infectious diseases can be contained.

### For more information about this study, please contact: Mats J. Olsson at mats.j.olsson@ki.se.

Co-authors on this research include Johan Lundström, Amy Gordon, Bianka Karshikoff, Nishteman Hosseini, Kimmo Sorjonen, Caroline Olgart Höglund, Carmen Solares, Anne Soop, John Axelsson, and Mats Lekander of Karolinska Institutet; and Bruce Kimball of the Monell Chemical Sense Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

This study was supported by the Swedish Research Council; the Bank of Sweden Tercentenary Foundation; the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation; the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine; the Swedish Heart-Lung Foundation; the Center for Allergy Research; the Petrus and Augusta Hedlund's Foundation; the Swedish Asthma and Allergy Foundation; the Stockholm Stress Center; and the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research.

The article abstract can be found online: http://pss.sagepub.com/content/early/2014/01/21/0956797613515681.abstract.

The APS journal Psychological Science is the highest ranked empirical journal in psychology. For a copy of the article "The Scent of Disease: Human Body Odor Contains an Early Chemosensory Cue of Sickness" and access to other Psychological Science research findings, please contact Anna Mikulak at 202-293-9300 or amikulak@psychologicalscience.org.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Interventions work to stem freshman drinking

2014-01-23
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] -- A new systematic review of data published in more than 40 studies of freshman alcohol interventions finds that there are many effective ways for colleges to mitigate common drinking ...

Fur and feathers keep animals warm by scattering light

2014-01-23
WASHINGTON, Jan. 23—In work that has major implications for improving the ...

Are enough women included in medical device studies, as required by the FDA?

2014-01-23
New Rochelle, NY, January 23, 2013-The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) mandates adequate enrollment of women in post-approval studies (PAS) of medical ...

Practice makes perfect if you have a partner's touch, according to new study

2014-01-23
People improve their performance more when they practise with a partner rather than on their own, according to a new study. The research could ultimately help people rehabilitating ...

Natural History Museum, London, yields remarkable new beetle specimens from Brazil

2014-01-23
A visit to the Natural History Museum, London, yielded an unexpected surprise for Dr. Joseph Parker, a UK biologist based in New York at Columbia University and the American Museum of Natural History. Among ...

Death row confessions and the last meal test of innocence

2014-01-23
Can last meals reveal more about individuals on death row than their taste preference? Some have argued there is significance embedded in death row last meal decisions. Famously, Ricky Ray Rector asked to save his untouched ...

2 proteins compete for 1 port on a growth factor; 1 promotes metastasis, the other blocks it

2014-01-23
HOUSTON – Consider two drivers, each with ...

The $125 billion question: How will the ACA affect cancer survivors?

2014-01-23
In 2010, the total cost of cancer care in the United States reached $125 billion. Globally, the economic toll from cancer is nearly 20 percent higher than the leading cause of death, ...

Looking for a 'superhabitable' world? Try Alpha Centauri B, says Astrobiology Journal

2014-01-23
New Rochelle, January 23, 2014—The search for extraterrestrial life extends far beyond Earth's solar system, looking for planets or moons outside the ...

Better eating habits, not bad economy, stabilized obesity rates

2014-01-23
All those people who've been telling us for years that we should eat more healthy foods and cut our calories – stop, take a moment, and celebrate. It appears that we actually ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New research confirms people with ME/CFS have a consistent faulty cellular structure

Hidden cancer risk behind fatty liver disease targets

Born in brightness, leading to darkness

Boron-containing Z-type and bilayer benzoxene

Hong Kong researchers break the single-field barrier with dual-field assisted diamond cutting

Work hard, play hard?

Wood becomes smart glass: Photo- and electro-chromic membrane switches tint in seconds

The Lancet: COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy decreased over time, though mistrust persists among certain groups, study of over 1 million people in England suggests

Psychosis patients ‘living in metaphor’ -- new study radically shifts ideas about delusions

Clinical trial in Ethiopia targets the trachoma scourge

Open-sourcing the future of food

Changes in genetic structure of yeast lead to disease-causing genomic instabilities

UC San Diego Health Sciences Grant Writing Course helps launch successful research careers

Study: Many head and neck cancer trials end early. Why?

Tufts vice provost for research named Foreign Fellow of Indian National Science Academy

New model improves prediction of prostate cancer death risk

Two wrongs make a right: how two damaging variants can restore health

Overlooked decline in grazing livestock brings risks and opportunities

Using rare sugars to address alcoholism

Research alert: New vulnerability identified in aggressive breast cancer

Ruth Harris honored with SSA Distinguished Service Award

Treasure trove of data on aging publicly accessible

Trees4Adapt project to address risks from climate change and biodiversity loss through tree-based solutions

Nature Communications study from the Lundquist Institute identifies molecular mechanism underlying peripartum cardiomyopathy

Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Gang Hu appointed to NIH Reproductive, Perinatal and Pediatric Health Review Group

World-first project shows great promise to treat low eye pressure

New technique puts rendered fabric in the best light

Brain cancer digital twin predicts treatment outcomes

Cat disease challenges what scientists thought about coronaviruses

Paulson Family Foundation makes an additional $19 million donation to Hebrew University to fund a new building for electrical engineering. Together with its previous gift brings the total donation to

[Press-News.org] Detecting sickness by smell