Asthma in Children

Symptoms

Symptoms of asthma can be mild or severe. Your child may have no symptoms; severe, daily symptoms; or something in between. How often your child has symptoms can also change. Symptoms of asthma may include:

  • Wheezing, a whistling noise of varying loudness that occurs when the airways of the lungs (bronchial tubesClick here to see an illustration.) narrow.
  • Coughing, which is the only symptom for some children.
  • Chest tightness.
  • Shortness of breath, which is rapid, shallow breathing or difficulty breathing.
  • Sleep disturbance.
  • Tiring quickly during exercise.

If your child has only one or two of these symptoms, it does not necessarily mean he or she has asthma. The more of these symptoms your child has, the more likely it is that he or she has asthma.

An asthma attack occurs when your child's symptoms suddenly increase. Factors that can lead to or worsen an asthma attack include:

Most asthma attacks result from a failure to successfully control asthma with medications. By strictly following the doctor's recommendations and taking all medications correctly, it is possible to prevent these attacks from occurring in most cases. While some asthma attacks occur very suddenly, many get worse gradually over a period of several days.

Many children have symptoms that become worse at night (nocturnal asthma). In all people, lung function changes throughout the day and night. In children with asthma, this often is very noticeable, especially at night, and nighttime cough and shortness of breath occur frequently. In general, waking at night because of shortness of breath or cough indicates poorly controlled asthma.

It can be difficult to know how severe your child's asthma attack is. Symptoms are used to classify asthma by severity. Talk with your health professional about how to evaluate your child's symptoms.

Symptoms are also used along with peak expiratory flow to help define the green, yellow, and red zones of your child's asthma action plan. You use this to decide on treatment during an asthma attack.

Other conditions with symptoms similar to asthma include sinusitis and vocal cord dysfunction.


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Author: Maria G. Essig, MS, ELSLast Updated: March 22, 2007
Medical Review: Michael J. Sexton, MD - Pediatrics
Harold S. Nelson, MD - Allergy and Immunology

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Topic Contents
 Overview
 Health Tools Click here to view Health Tools.
 FAQs
 Cause
Arrow PointerSymptoms
 What Happens
 What Increases Your Risk
 When to Call a Doctor
 Exams and Tests
 Treatment Overview
 Prevention
 Living With Asthma
 Medications
 Other Treatment
 Other Places To Get Help
 Related Information
 References
 Credits