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Clue to mental illness all in the nose

 Wednesday December 6, 2006


 Predicting the onset of mental illness could soon be as simple as smelling a
scratch-and-sniff card loaded with the aroma of roses or a whiff of petrol.

Scientists have taken the same technology popular in children's books and
designed a test to help diagnose brain disorders before the onset of any
symptoms.

The test can be used for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases,
obsessive-compulsive disorder and schizophrenia, as well as some illnesses
affecting adolescents.

It originated in a discovery by Melbourne University researchers of a link
between these illnesses and a poor ability to identify smells.

To test their theory, they developed a set of 40 scratch-and-sniff cards and
asked people to identify the smell from a list of four possibilities, such as
coffee, roses, oranges and petrol.

Professor Warwick Brewer, from the university's Orygen Research Centre, said
the people who later went on to develop a brain disorder had demonstrated
difficulty correctly answering more than half the questions.

He said the simple test also could be used by relatives of people with these
conditions.

"Because of the genetic link in many illnesses, it is hoped the test could
also be used by family members of people who have developed an illness of the
brain."

Professor Christos Pantelis, from the Melbourne Neuropsychiatry Centre, said
smell ability provided unique information about brain structure and function.

"Mental illness can arrest the full maturation of the frontal lobe, while
degenerative illness can damage it," Professor Pantelis said.

"This area of the brain is used to analyse and identify smells so an abnormal
sense of smell may indicate problems in this 'thinking' area of the brain."

Their research also revealed that the sense of smell is worse in those with
more severe illnesses, giving important clues into the patient's long-term
prospects.

The research has been compiled in a new book, Olfaction and the Brain.

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