Exercise with a mask on can be really good for you, actually.

Exercise with a mask on can be really good for you, actually

Multiple studies found only a slight rise in CO2 — and that may help your workout.

For most of the pandemic, I saw masks as a necessary evil when going out for my daily 5K run. I'd stick it on if someone was coming the other way down the street, of course, and cross over to the other side or run in the road where possible. That's just good manners in the COVID era. But at all other moments my mask was a potential menace. It felt suffocating, and was forever getting sweaty and gross. I took to running with it catching the wind in one hand, almost flying it like a kite to keep it dry.

But that was before I read up on the latest news from the world of breathing and exercise, spurred by James Nestor's groundbreaking book Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art. You can read my full story on that science here, but the TL;DR is that you should always aim to breathe slowly through your nose, even while working out, and that a little bit of extra carbon dioxide actually helps your body absorb more oxygen — a counterintuitive but well-established rule known as the Bohr effect.

In putting those rules into action, my mask suddenly became my best friend. It encouraged nose breathing, because to do otherwise was to risk a mouthful of sweaty cloth. Instead of worrying about suffocating, I was thinking about the extra oxygen molecules being delivered via my hemoglobin thanks to the Bohr effect. More O2 in the muscles means lower levels of lactic acid, the thing that makes our muscles painful when we exercise.

The more I ran in a mask with proper breathing, in other words, the less exhausted my legs felt. My 5K times dropped suddenly, by about 10 minutes on average, and they have stayed there throughout the last couple of months. Now I keep my mask on the whole time, especially as the weather turns cold; the rosy running nose of winter is a thing of the past.

So it was heartening to see my experience replicated in two new studies on masks and workouts this fall, one in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, the other in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports. As noted by the New York Times, both of these studies surprised both sets of researchers, who had all hypothesized that mask-wearing would lead to exhaustion. Carbon dioxide levels were elevated, especially in N95 masks, but no headaches or breathing issues were reported.

Caution is warranted, of course. These two studies used participants who were already healthy and active; the second used men only. They studied cycling, not other forms of activity; the researchers presume it also applies to running and weight training, though we won't know for sure without more masked studies. As with nose breathing and raising your CO2 in general, you should not try to change too much about your workout routine too quickly. Consider it the equivalent of altitude training, because that's basically what it is.

But in a study of studies published in November's Annals of the American Thoracic Society, 10 American and Canadian researchers reviewed all the literature and found "there is no current evidence to support sex-based or age-based differences in the physiological responses to exercise while wearing a facemask." There were no negative effects to muscles, blood flow or the brain detected in any study, except for a small number of people with severe cardiopulmonary disease — folks who really shouldn't be working out without advice from their doctor in any case.

"Wearing a face mask can be uncomfortable," the study's first author, Susan Hopkins of UC San Diego said in a press release. "You may re-inhale warmer, slightly-enriched CO2 air, and if you're exercising, the mask can cause your face to become hot and sweaty. But these are sensory perceptions. They do not impact cardiopulmonary function in healthy people."

I won't exactly be sorry to see the masks go in our brave new vaccine-driven post-COVID world, presuming that aligns with the warmer weather of spring and summer 2021. But until then I will relish the winter warmth and training in better breathing that masks provide. Indeed, my next step on the workout mask front is to buy more and stuff my pockets with them — so I can swap them out when things get a little too sweaty.

More in HealthCOVID-19

Comments

  1. It “may help your work out”- or it “may” make you dizzy. You know what else is good for you? Fresh air.

    https://media.tenor.co/images/96f0f3b4f5a612d113399ffe4c1574e7/tenor.gif?fbclid=IwAR3MbXeSOPoo3eR0CEmUwFLQ_dsbfKAsuFJ56e68dLLO4AJ1HoD9hlG44Uo

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ah yes, you're a doctor too huh? Totally qualified to tell another group of scientists they are wrong? Didn't really think so

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  2. Just here to read all the all comments from one time licensed thoracic surgeons and pulmonary doctors that decided to seek alternate professions as Walmart greeters and convenience store clerks .

    ReplyDelete
  3. Mask, mask I am so tired of the hype

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Again, show the community where it hurts.

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  4. Nothing that restricts your air flow is good for you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Are you a doctor? A scientist who specializes in biochemistry? No? I think I'll listen to the people that do this for a living.

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    2. Why do top level athletes train at high altitudes? Why do oxygen restricting masks already exist for this exact time of training?

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  5. Raising co2 helps? Are you all crazy?

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    Replies
    1. It's similar to athletes training at high elevations.

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  6. Not in any way… CO2 exhaustion is key to weight loss. People think it’s sweat, but fat is made of
    mostly C17H35COOH which when exhaled is reacted to CO2+H2O.

    Check this great Ted Talk out

    https://youtu.be/vuIlsN32WaE

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  7. Good at tagging the sheep

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  8. Thats true is reducing oxygen more creating deprevation...harder workout quicker heartrate better excercise.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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    2. I believe,that you forget to mention,that it's not recommended to beginners....

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    3. That's not the point of this article or headline....it's so you keep that muzzle on.. period. Stop encouraging this stupidity

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    4. You need more masks on. We can still hear you

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    5. Sush yourself hey

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  9. Might as well just hyperventilate in a paper bag if your that desperate to

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    Replies
    1. No, you re just that desperate to bash masks when there are 10000 more important things going on.

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    2. what like... what your doing?

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    3. what I'm doing is pointing out to people that, 1, they are not more qualified than doctors to have a medical opinion, and 2, masks help prevent the spread of disease, point blank.

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    4. I'm guessing thats your unqualified medical opinion... I was never debating the ability of a mask to stop spread.... your just making complete assumptions, your also changing the subject, you should just hold your breath permanently

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    5. All this mask breathing has clearly affected your already limited mental capabilities

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    6. I'm not making my own opinion. I'm trusting scientists. What did i change the subject from? The article is about masks. And no, i wont take you up on your gross and intellectually challenged offer to off myself.

      Delete
    7. You're so funny and clever. Your lazy insults are so typical.

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    8. if people commonly say this to you maybe its saying something

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    9. No actually, they dont. So that certainly fell flat for you huh? You literally just parrot the same insults I see on other threads. And its not even related to the discussion, so its not like a "correct" insult would prove your point or something.

      Delete
  10. Yeah it's so helpful that it put peoples into unconsciousness.

    https://giphy.com/gifs/thedrewbarrymoreshow-Guccz4Oq87bncsm1j4

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    Replies
    1. It's called "higher altitude training" and it's been around for decades.

      https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.trainingmask.com/&ved=2ahUKEwj4u5royd3zAhWEZs0KHZa1BuwQFnoECGMQAQ&usg=AOvVaw1qkbPYFhInYpmlt5SIGsTE

      Delete
    2. Yah, you wont find one real example of this, youre just bullshitting.

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  11. More Bad science. Long Term exposure to higher Co2 levels is not good for you. Recently did an Echo Stress test with a mask on and starving for oxygen is not healthy period almost lost consciousness. Wouldn't have happened if I wasn't wearing mask.

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    Replies
    1. Do you have a degree in biochemistry? A medical degree? Then you are not qualified to disagree with them. You literally do not have the capability to even construct a counter experiment, which would inevitably prove you wrong amyway.

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    2. Craig put a plastic bag on your head and work out.

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    3. Actually I am a former Decompression Diver who has a very thorough understanding of Po2 levels of Co2, O2. High Altitude training does not have you rebreathing the same Co2, it has you breathing a lower partial pressure of Oxygen. Big Difference Mr Pretntious.

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  12. This is the most moronic post I've ever seen. It reminds me of the magazine advertisement for starting babies on Coke, or the one that states more doctors smoke camels. How about we drink radium as well? Research supported it back the the day.

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    Replies
    1. You should seriously consider looking at your own posts. ;D

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    2. weird. Because athletes actually do "high altitude training" with *masks*.

      https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.trainingmask.com/&ved=2ahUKEwj4u5royd3zAhWEZs0KHZa1BuwQFnoECGMQAQ&usg=AOvVaw1qkbPYFhInYpmlt5SIGsTE

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    3. You got the, "high" part right.

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  13. Talk about gaslighting! ;D

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  14. Unless you're unfit, then it may trigger a cardiac event

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  15. BS....Spanish Flu....do youre thing and look It up!!....they want you dead!!

    ReplyDelete
  16. Source: trashable paid by soros

    ReplyDelete

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