Fact checked byKristen Dowd

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May 15, 2023
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Mask wearing showed no negative oxygenation, hemodynamic changes in patients with COPD

Fact checked byKristen Dowd
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Key takeaways:

  • A KF80 mask did not negatively impact oxygenation or hemodynamics in adults with mild to moderate COPD.
  • Future studies need to include different mask types and assess long-term consequences.
Perspective from Andrew J. Gangemi, MD

Wearing a KF80 mask while exercising and performing daily activities did not impact oxygenation and hemodynamic factors in adults with mild to moderate COPD, according to study results published in Annals of the American Thoracic Society.

“We did not observe any impairment in oxygenation or serious changes in hemodynamic parameters while our participants wore KF80 masks,” Sang-Heon Kim, MD, PhD, of Hanyang University College of Medicine, and colleagues wrote. “Although we did not measure the end-tidal carbon dioxide or respiratory rate, these findings suggest that wearing masks does not have serious adverse effects on respiratory function and cardiovascular hemodynamics, even during strenuous exercise.”

Source: Adobe Stock.
Wearing a KF80 mask while exercising and performing daily activities did not impact oxygenation and hemodynamic factors in adults with mild to moderate COPD, according to study results published in Annals of the American Thoracic Society. Image: Adobe Stock

In a single-center prospective randomized crossover study, Kim and colleagues evaluated 30 adults (median age, 71 years; 96.7% men) with mild to moderate COPD in Seoul, South Korea, to determine how face masks effect oxygen saturation and hemodynamic responses when they work out and conduct daily activities.

Researchers tested for these outcomes with use of the KF80 mask, which is similar to the European FFP1 mask, with a “0.6 m particle filtration rate of at least 80%,” according to researchers.

To evaluate changes with mask wearing, researchers collected patients’ oxygen saturation, heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, electrocardiogram and echocardiography before they exercised on a treadmill with a mask on. The same factors were then measured during/after exercise.

Additionally, researchers had the patients wear a mask for 24 hours while they conducted their daily activities to see how heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure and electrocardiogram changed from baseline through ambulatory blood pressure and Holter monitoring.

Oxygen saturation and hemodynamic responses during exercise and daily activities were also evaluated without wearing a mask in all patients.

Compared with baseline measurements of oxygen saturation, researchers found significant reductions after exercise both with a mask (baseline median, 96%; interquartile range [IQR], 94-97 vs. after, 91%; IQR, 86-93; P = .001) and without a mask (baseline, 96%; IQR, 95-97 vs. after, 91%; IQR, 86-94; P = .001), and both phases resulted in the same lowest percentage of oxygen saturation.

In a subgroup analysis, those with less than 5% of oxygen saturation changes while exercising (n = 14) did not significantly differ from those with an at least 5% change (n = 16) when evaluating how wearing masks differed between both sets of adults.

In terms of hemodynamic factors during exercise, testing with a mask and without a mask both showed heart rates above baseline (P < .001 for both) and comparable maximum heart rates at peak exercise, according to researchers.

While working out on the treadmill, researchers did not observe any instances of a significant decrease in blood pressure or electrocardiogram changes in the patients.

Researchers did see a significant reduction when measuring diastolic dysfunction following exercise with a mask on (before, 9.3; IQR, 7.8-13.3 vs. after, 8.5; IQR, 7.4-10.6); however, they wrote that this “does not imply the presence of a relaxation abnormality or a significant hemodynamic compromise.”

Looking at changes in hemodynamic variables during daily activities when wearing a mask vs. not wearing a mask, blood pressure and heart rate did not significantly vary based on mask wearing, according to researchers.

Researchers note the presence of several limitations in this study including only testing with the KF80 mask, population made up of nearly all men, population of only those with mild to moderate COPD and a lack of assessment on the long-term consequences of mask wearing.

Despite these limitations, the results offer important insight on the effects of mask wearing.

“The findings of this prospective randomized crossover study suggest that wearing a face mask does not have serious effects on oxygenation and cardiovascular hemodynamics in patients with mild to moderate COPD,” Kim and colleagues wrote. “Thus, the protective benefits of wearing masks with regard to infection prevention appear to outweigh the risks.”