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  1. May 19, 2024 · Receptors in your nose turn messages from smells received into electrical signals for the brain to interpret. You can smell food through your nose without tasting it. But when you're eating, the smells also travel to the back of your nose from the back of your mouth.

    • Feature Writer
    • Lisa Marie Conklin
    • Persistent body odor. If a shower can’t help your body odor, it could be a sign of a magnesium deficiency. “The mineral magnesium helps in ‘deodorizing’ our internal organs and also helps with our body odor,” says cardiologist Robert Segal, MD, co-founder of LabFinder.
    • More BO. If you have a digestive disorder such as Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis, you could be short on zinc. Zinc helps your body manage waste and toxins, says Dr. Segal; when a digestive diorder is present, the body may not absorb the mineral as it should.
    • Rotten-egg breath. If a floss, brush, or piece of minty gum can’t cut the odor, you may have a bacterial infection, Dr. Segal warns. A common bacteria called H. pylori that can take up residence in your digestive system could be to blame.
    • Rotten-apple breath. “When we don’t have enough insulin in our body, our liver then creates the chemical ketones, which are our body’s way to compensate for the lack of insulin,” says Dr. Segal.
  2. Dysgeusia (pronounced “dis-gyoo-zee-uh”) is a disorder that distorts your sense of taste. People with this condition often say that anything they eat tastes like metal, rancid or bitter. Dysgeusia isn’t a serious medical condition. But it can affect your appetite and quality of life.

    • Poor oral hygiene. If you don’t brush and floss regularly, the result can be teeth and gum problems such as gingivitis, periodontitis and tooth infection.
    • Prescription drugs. “Some medications can cause a metallic taste because your body absorbs the medicine and it then comes out in the saliva,” Dr. Ford explains.
    • Over-the-counter vitamins or medicines. Multivitamins with heavy metals (such as chromium, copper and zinc) or cold remedies (such as zinc lozenges) can cause a metallic taste.
    • Infections. Some temporary illnesses can change your sense of taste, which may leave you tasting metal: Colds. Sinusitis. Upper respiratory infections. The taste usually goes away when the infection does, so take it easy and get well soon.
    • Emesis or vomiting. The act of vomiting usually leaves us with a bad, bitter taste in our mouth, most likely due to digestive enzymes that reach the oral cavity.
    • Gastroesophageal reflux disease, GERD or acid reflux. The bad taste in our mouth after waking up in the morning is very likely caused by stomach acid going up the esophagus and reaching the oral cavity.
    • Pregnancy-related and other hormonal imbalances. Most expecting mothers experience nausea and vomiting in the first trimester of their pregnancy. Frequent vomiting leaves a bad, metallic or bitter taste in the mouth.
    • Taking antibiotics. Medication in general comes with a long list of side effects, some dangerous, some merely unpleasant. Certain antibiotics, for example, can cause either a bitter or a metallic taste in the mouth.
  3. Feb 3, 2017 · Men's Health explored the five common body odors that might signal a serious health problem. Here’s what you should do if the stench arises.

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  5. May 20, 2024 · The medical term for a bad taste in the mouth is dysgeusia. Dysgeusia can vary from person-to-person. The bad taste may be: bitter. metallic. sour. salty. sickly sweet. Causes of a bad taste...

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