Published March 13, 2015 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Olfactory Thresholds of the U.S. Population of Home-Dwelling Older Adults: Development and Validation of a Short, Reliable Measure

Description

Current methods of olfactory sensitivity testing are logistically challenging and therefore infeasible for use in in-home surveys and other field settings. We developed a fast, easy and reliable method of assessing olfactory thresholds, and used it in the first study of olfactory sensitivity in a nationally representative sample of U.S. home-dwelling older adults. We validated our method via computer simulation together with a model estimated from 590 normosmics. Simulated subjects were assigned n-butanol thresholds drawn from the estimated normosmic distribution and based on these and the model, we simulated administration of both the staircase and constant stimuli methods. Our results replicate both the correlation between the two methods and their reliability as previously reported by studies using human subjects. Further simulations evaluated the reliability of different constant stimuli protocols, varying both the range of dilutions and number of stimuli (6–16). Six appropriately chosen dilutions were sufficient for good reliability (0.67) in normosmic subjects. Finally, we applied our method to design a 5-minute, in-home assessment of older adults (National Social Life, Health and Aging Project, or NSHAP), which had comparable reliability (0.56), despite many subjects having estimated thresholds above the strongest dilution. Thus, testing with a fast, 6-item constant stimuli protocol is informative, and permits olfactory testing in previously inaccessible research settings.

Data availability

The NSHAP Wave 2 data described here are publicly available through the National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA, https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/NACDA/). The software used here to simulate both the staircase and constant stimuli protocols is available at (http://rcg-software.uchicago.edu/stata) in a package called olfactsim for use with Stata, and includes a description of the steps necessary to evaluate a new or existing protocol.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0118589
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:8807

Funding

National Institute on Aging
AG033903-01
National Institute on Aging
AG030481
National Institute on Aging
Specialized Training Program in the Demography and Economics of Aging
Mellon Foundation
Social Sciences Dissertation-Year Fellowship
Gianinno
Graduate Research Fund
McHugh
Otolaryngology Research Fund
American Geriatrics Society
Dennis W. Jahnigen Scholars Award
Institute for Translational Medicine
KL2RR025000
Institute for Translational Medicine
UL1RR024999

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Social Sciences Division
Department(s)
Comparative Human Development
Center(s) or Institute(s)
Institute for Mind and Biology