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Dr. Andrew Rynne
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Dr. Andrew Rynne

Family Physician

Exp 50 years

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Headaches, Been Experiencing Strange Smell. Done MRI. Is That Normal?

I had an MRI recently in regards to determining the cause of ongoing headaches (my MRI was completely clear). Two days after the MRI, I began smelling a strong fiberglass resin sort of smell. You might also describe it as the smell of electrical components, like a PCB type thing was leaking. The smell has persisted for more than 3 weeks now, sometimes overpowering and sometimes just a faint whiff. Today on a followup with my neurologist I mentioned this smell to his nurse, and she said, Yes, we get that a lot after MRIs. When I asked the doctor 5 minutes later, he shook his head and said, I ve never heard of anything like that. I m not interested in suing anyone… I d just like to know the truth. And if it was caused by the MRI, will the smell ever go away?
Thu, 14 Nov 2013
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Internal Medicine Specialist 's  Response
Hi there,

Thanks for your query.

Firstly, you have not mentioned your age, since your problem occurs in old age only.

From the information available, you are probably suffering from :-

1. A condition called Phantosmia, which is a form of "olfactory hallucination". Phantosmia is the perception of a smell in the absence of any physical odors.

Causes of Phantosmia :-

* Temporal Lobe epilepsy, particularly involving olfactory area of the brain which perceives smell sensation. In most of the cases, there is no loss of consciousness. Since MRI brain is normal, I recommend that an EEG (Electroencephalogram) be conducted to evidence of epilepsy.

* Olfactory Migraines :- in which abnormal smells are perceived as an aura, that is, just before the migraine attack occurs. This is a relatively rare condition, but perhaps, you may be suffering from it in view of recurrent headaches with Phantosmia.

* Other causes of Phantosmia are :-

- head injury, accident
- Schizophrenia
- Upper respiratory tract infection
- Allergic rhinitis (nasal inflammation)
- Chronic sinus disease or chronic rhinitis

* Causes of Phantosmia in elderly age group :-

- Depression or Alzheimer's
- As a precursor to subsequent development of Parkinson's.

Hence, if I were your treating doctor, my course of action would have been as follows :-

# Order EEG. If abnormal, diagnosis of Temoral Lobe epilepsy would have been made --> prescribe a long course of anti-epileptic drugs.

# If EEG normal --> diagnosis of olfactory migraines considered --> prophylactic (preventive) treatment would have been prescribed with anti-depressant venlafaxime + anti-anxiety drug + beta-blocker drug.

Consult your treating Neurologist and discuss my opinion/recommendations with him. I am sure he will agree with my expert opinion; order relevant tests and- based on the outcome of the tests- prescribe disease-specific treatment.

Dr. Rakesh Karanwal

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Headaches, Been Experiencing Strange Smell. Done MRI. Is That Normal?

Hi there, Thanks for your query. Firstly, you have not mentioned your age, since your problem occurs in old age only. From the information available, you are probably suffering from :- 1. A condition called Phantosmia, which is a form of olfactory hallucination . Phantosmia is the perception of a smell in the absence of any physical odors. Causes of Phantosmia :- * Temporal Lobe epilepsy, particularly involving olfactory area of the brain which perceives smell sensation. In most of the cases, there is no loss of consciousness. Since MRI brain is normal, I recommend that an EEG (Electroencephalogram) be conducted to evidence of epilepsy. * Olfactory Migraines :- in which abnormal smells are perceived as an aura, that is, just before the migraine attack occurs. This is a relatively rare condition, but perhaps, you may be suffering from it in view of recurrent headaches with Phantosmia. * Other causes of Phantosmia are :- - head injury, accident - Schizophrenia - Upper respiratory tract infection - Allergic rhinitis (nasal inflammation) - Chronic sinus disease or chronic rhinitis * Causes of Phantosmia in elderly age group :- - Depression or Alzheimer s - As a precursor to subsequent development of Parkinson s. Hence, if I were your treating doctor, my course of action would have been as follows :- # Order EEG. If abnormal, diagnosis of Temoral Lobe epilepsy would have been made -- prescribe a long course of anti-epileptic drugs. # If EEG normal -- diagnosis of olfactory migraines considered -- prophylactic (preventive) treatment would have been prescribed with anti-depressant venlafaxime + anti-anxiety drug + beta-blocker drug. Consult your treating Neurologist and discuss my opinion/recommendations with him. I am sure he will agree with my expert opinion; order relevant tests and- based on the outcome of the tests- prescribe disease-specific treatment. Dr. Rakesh Karanwal