Publication | Open Access
Aerosol particle emission increases exponentially above moderate exercise intensity resulting in superemission during maximal exercise
46
Citations
27
References
2022
Year
Physical ActivityAerosol Particle EmissionAir Pollution FiltrationOccupational Health SciencesAir QualityMaximal ExerciseAerosol ParticlesCovid-19KinesiologyAerosol TransportIndoor AerosolExerciseAerosol SamplingPhysical ExerciseHealth SciencesLung DepositionExercise ScienceAerobiologyPhysiologyExercise PhysiologyPulmonary PhysiologyLung MechanicsIndoor Air QualityAir PollutionMedicineAerosol Particle Concentration
Many airborne pathogens such as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) are transmitted indoors via aerosol particles. During exercise, pulmonary ventilation can increase over 10-fold, and therefore, exercisers will exhale a greater volume of aerosol-containing air. However, we currently do not know how exercise affects the concentration of aerosol particles in exhaled air and the overall emission of aerosol particles. Consequently, we developed a method to measure in parallel the concentration of aerosol particles in expired air, pulmonary ventilation, and aerosol particle emission at rest and during a graded exercise test to exhaustion. We used this method to test eight women and eight men in a descriptive study. We found that the aerosol particle concentration in expired air increased significantly from 56 ± 53 particles/liter at rest to 633 ± 422 particles/liter at maximal intensity. Aerosol particle emission per subject increased significantly by a factor of 132 from 580 ± 489 particles/min at rest to a super emission of 76,200 ± 48,000 particles/min during maximal exercise. There were no sex differences in aerosol particle emission, but endurance-training subjects emitted significantly more aerosol particles during maximal exercise than untrained subjects. Overall, aerosol particle emission increased moderately up to an exercise intensity of ∼2 W/kg and exponentially thereafter. Together, these data might partly explain superspreader events especially during high-intensity group exercise indoors and suggest that strong infection prevention measures are needed especially during exercise at an intensity that exceeds ∼2 W/kg. Investigations of influencing factors like airway and whole-body hydration status during exercise on aerosol particle generation are needed.
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