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Performing Moderate to Severe Activity is Safe and Tolerable for Healthy Youth While Wearing a Cloth Facemask

Abstract

Objective: To investigate if a cloth facemask could affect physiological and perceptual responses to exercise at distinct exercise intensities in healthy young individuals.

Methods: Nine participants (sex, female/male: 6/3; age: 13±1 years; VO2peak: 44.5±5.5 mL/kg/min) underwent a progressive square-wave test at four intensities: (1) 80% of ventilatory anaerobic threshold (VAT), (2) VAT, and (3) 40% between VAT and [Formula: see text] wearing a triple-layered cloth facemask or not. Participants then completed a final stage to exhaustion at a running speed equivalent to the maximum achieved during the cardio-respiratory exercise test (Peak). Physiological, metabolic, and perceptual measures were measured.

Results: Mask did not affect spirometry (forced vital capacity, peak expiratory flow, forced expiratory volume; all p≥0.27), respiratory (inspiratory capacity, end-expiratory volume [EELV] to functional vital capacity ratio, EELV, respiratory frequency [Rf], tidal volume [VT], Rf/VT, end-tidal carbo dioxide pressure, ventilatory equivalent to carbon dioxide ratio; all p≥0.196), hemodynamic (heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure; all p>0.41), ratings of perceived exertion (p = 0.04) or metabolic measures (lactate; p = 0.78) at rest or at any exercise intensity.

Conclusions: This study shows that performing moderate to severe activity is safe and tolerable for healthy youth while wearing a cloth facemask.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04887714.

Citing Articles

Sports despite masks: no negative effects of FFP2 face masks on cardiopulmonary exercise capacity in children.

Weigelt A, Schoffl I, Rottermann K, Wallisch W, Muller S, Dittrich S Eur J Pediatr. 2023; 183(2):639-648.

PMID: 37950791 PMC: 10912408. DOI: 10.1007/s00431-023-05316-2.

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