I asked this a while back, because I sometimes produce an aroma when I sneeze forcefully (a sort of sweetish, musky smell, in my case). Can’t find the thread though; I think it’s gone.
Oooh, whenever I smell sweet after I sneeze, I run for the Airborne and Echinacea. It means I’m getting sick. I don’t know if it’s a quirk of my body or if some bacteria (or bacteria byproduct) smells sweet, but the sweet sneezes are precoursers to really bad chest colds for me.
(And the copious, thick phlegm from them also tastes sweet.)
Does she happen to use a steroid nasal spray? A number of them have this strong flowery aroma that I can smell for hours after I use it (and since I hate scents, I made the doctor switch me to another product).
You beat me to it. Flonase, for one, has a very strong “rose” smell. When my partner uses it she smells like she just ate her way through a rose garden.
Thanks for the replies. She doesn’t use any kind of nasal spray.
Googling the words sneeze smell turned up some cases of others who’d experienced something similar, but no concrete answers that I saw. Some people seemed convinced that the sneeze was merely clearing their nose and allowing them to notice other smells – but that’s clearly not the cause here, as my fiancee and I can both smell her sneezes.
I agree; in my particular case, it’s always the same, distinctive and unusual smell - every time, and it is detectable on the item sneezed upon (usually one of my hands, as it most often occurs with violent, unexpected sneezes).
Could be! My boss suffers from the same disorder and there have been reports of a bright flash of light; perhaps the sun really does shine out of his arse.