Sensory Hyperreactivity and Chemical Sensitivity, Tilia
Home
About this website
News
På svenska
Nyheter
Auf Deutsch
Download books
Research group
Funding sources
Research abstracts
Links
 

Latest update: 2011-02-27

Prevention of asthma induced by cold air by cellulose-fabric face mask

Authors: Millqvist E, Bake B, Bengtsson U, Löwhagen O

Journal: Allergy. 1995 Mar;50(3):221-4

We have tested the effect of a porous cellulose fabric face mask. Nine asthmatic patients, anamnestically sensitive to cold, took part in exercise tests on an ergometer bicycle at a temperature of approximately -10 degrees C, with and without a face mask. For comparison, exercise tests were also performed with breathing taking place through a woolen scarf. Three minutes after finishing the exercise test, there was an average fall in FEV1 of 32% in the group without a face mask. The corresponding fall in FEV1 was 6% with a face mask and 17% with a scarf. In order to get some idea of the patients' attitudes to the face mask, it was used by 25 asthma patients during a period of 2 weeks in winter, after which they were asked to answer a simple questionnaire. Eighty-eight percent of the patients stated that the face mask had provided satisfactory protection against asthma complaints induced by cold air, and 72% reported that they had been able to spend more time out-of-doors. The results show that porous cellulose fabric designed as a face mask offers effective protection against asthma complaints induced by cold air and exercise, and that the patients appear to appreciate this protective aid highly despite the cosmetic disadvantages.

PMID: 7677238 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

The full text is available at:
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7677238

« Back to research abstracts