PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Mouth-nose masks impair the visual field of healthy eyes.

  • Annika Weber,
  • Bettina Hohberger,
  • Antonio Bergua

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251201
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 5
p. e0251201

Abstract

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BackgroundMouth-nose masks have been requested to prevent the transmission of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2). The aim of the present study was to investigate, if wearing a mouth-nose mask impairs the visual field function in normals.MethodsThirty eyes of 30 subjects were recruited for the present study. White-on-white perimetry (OCTOPUS 900; 90°) was done and sensitivity was analysed in 14 defined test points (P1-P14, inferior visual field) under 3 different test conditions while the subjects were wearing a mouth-nose mask: (I) 1.5 cm under the lower eyelid, nose clip not used (position1.5cm_no_clip); (II) 1.5 cm under the lower eyelid, nose clip correctly positioned (position1.5cm_with_clip); (III) 0.5 cm under the lower eyelid, nose clip correctly positioned (position0.5cm_with_clip). All data were compared to sensitivity without wearing a mouth-nose mask (reference). Mean Δ was calculated, being the difference between the results of each test condition and reference, respectively.ResultsSensitivity was significantly different between position1.5cm_no_clip and reference at 10 test points (pConclusionVisual field function was observed to be significantly impaired in the inferior-nasal sector while persons were wearing a mouth-nose mask, especially when the nose clip was not correctly used.