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Autoren: Mezghani, Nourhen
Ammar, Achraf
Boukhris, Omar
Masmoudi, Liwa
Boujelbane, Mohamed Ali
Ben Ayed, Rayda
Alzahrani, Turki Mohsen
Hadadi, Atyh
Abid, Rihab
Ouergui, Ibrahim
Glenn, Jordan M.
Trabelsi, Khaled
Chtourou, Hamdi
Titel: The impact of wearing different face masks on vigorous physical exercise performance and perceived exertion among COVID-19 infected vs. uninfected female students
Online-Publikationsdatum: 14-Dez-2023
Erscheinungsdatum: 2023
Sprache des Dokuments: Englisch
Zusammenfassung/Abstract: Under certain circumstances, masks are an effective and immediate solution to reduce the spread of viral infection. However, the impact of masks on the ability to perform vigorous exercise remains an area of concern. Primarily, this impact has been explored in healthy subjects, yielding contradictory findings, and little is known of it among COVID-19-infected individuals. This study examined the effects of surgical masks, N-95 masks, and unmasked conditions on the performance and perceived exertion (RPE) of infected vs. non-infected young women during high-intensity, repeated sprint exercise (5mSRT). Following a familiarization session, eighty-three (42 COVID-19-previously infected (PIG) and 43 non-infected (NIG)), female participants (age 20.02 ± 1.05 years, BMI 21.07 ± 2.1 kg/m2) were randomly assigned to one of three mask conditions: unmasked, surgical mask, or N95 mask. All participants attended three test sessions (i.e., one session for each mask condition) at least one week apart. At the beginning of each test session, data related to participants’ physical activity (PA) and sleep behaviours during the previous week were collected. In each test session, participants performed the 5mSRT, during which performance indicators (best distance (BD), total distance (TD), fatigue index (FI) and percentage decrement (PD)) were collected, along with RPE. ANOVA indicated no significant main effects of Groups and Masks, and no significant interaction for Groups × Masks for BD, FI, PD, RPE and most sleep and PA behaviours (p > 0.05). For TD, the Groups × Mask interaction was significant (p = 0.031 and ƞp2 = 0.042). Posthoc analysis revealed, in the unmasked condition, there was no difference in TD between PIG and NIG (p > 0.05). However, when wearing a surgical mask, PIG covered lower TD compared to NIG (p < 0.05). Additionally, different types of masks did not affect TD in NIG, while PIG performed the worst using the surgical mask (p < 0.05). These results suggest post-COVID-19 individuals can maintain physical fitness through regular exercise (i.e., sport science curricula) in unmasked conditions, but not when wearing a surgical mask. Furthermore, the impact of different types of face masks on physical performance seems to be minimal, particularly in uninfected populations; future research is warranted to further explore this impact in post-COVID conditions.
DDC-Sachgruppe: 610 Medizin
610 Medical sciences
796 Sport
796 Athletic and outdoor sports and games
Veröffentlichende Institution: Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Organisationseinheit: FB 02 Sozialwiss., Medien u. Sport
Veröffentlichungsort: Mainz
ROR: https://ror.org/023b0x485
DOI: http://doi.org/10.25358/openscience-9715
Version: Published version
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenaufsatz
Weitere Angaben zur Dokumentart: Scientific article
Nutzungsrechte: CC BY
Informationen zu den Nutzungsrechten: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Zeitschrift: European journal of investigation in health, psychology and education
13
Seitenzahl oder Artikelnummer: 2709
2723
Verlag: MDPI
Verlagsort: Basel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2023
ISSN: 2254-9625
DOI der Originalveröffentlichung: 10.3390/ejihpe13110187
Enthalten in den Sammlungen:DFG-491381577-G

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