This lung condition causes the airways to swell and narrow, making it difficult to breathe. If it's not managed, some children can have dangerous attacks.
Update Date: 20.09.2025
In childhood asthma, the lungs and airways become easily inflamed when exposed to certain triggers. Such triggers include inhaling pollen or catching a cold or other respiratory infection. Childhood asthma can cause irritating daily symptoms that interfere with play, sports, school and sleep. In some children, asthma can cause dangerous asthma attacks if it's not managed properly.
Childhood asthma isn't a different disease from asthma in adults, but children face unique challenges. The condition is a leading cause of emergency department visits, hospitalizations and missed school days.
Childhood asthma can't be cured, and symptoms can continue into adulthood. But with the right treatment, you and your child can keep symptoms under control and prevent damage to growing lungs.
Common childhood asthma symptoms include:
Childhood asthma also might cause:
Asthma symptoms vary from child to child and might get worse or better over time. Your child might have only one symptom, such as a lingering cough or chest congestion.
It can be difficult to tell whether a child's symptoms are caused by asthma. Wheezing and other asthmalike symptoms can be caused by infectious bronchitis or another respiratory problem.
Take your child to see a healthcare professional if you suspect that your child has asthma. Early treatment will help control symptoms and possibly prevent asthma attacks.
Make an appointment with a health professional if you notice:
Children who have asthma may say things such as, "My chest feels funny" or "I'm always coughing." Listen for coughing in children, which might not wake them, when they are asleep. Crying, laughing, yelling, or strong emotional reactions and stress also might trigger coughing or wheezing.
If your child is diagnosed with asthma, creating an asthma plan can help you and other caregivers monitor symptoms and know what to do if an asthma attack occurs.
In severe cases, you might see your child's chest and sides pulling inward when breathing is difficult. Your child might have an increased heartbeat, sweating and chest pain. Seek emergency care if your child:
Even if your child hasn't been diagnosed with asthma, seek medical attention immediately if you notice troubled breathing. Although episodes of asthma vary in severity, asthma attacks can start with coughing. This progresses to wheezing and labored breathing.
Childhood asthma causes aren't fully understood. Increased immune system sensitivity causes the lungs and airways to swell and produce mucus when exposed to certain triggers. Reaction to a trigger can be delayed, making it more difficult to identify the trigger. Triggers vary from child to child and can include:
Sometimes, asthma symptoms happen with no apparent triggers.
Factors that might increase a child's chance of developing asthma include:
Asthma can cause a number of complications, including:
Careful planning and avoiding asthma triggers are the best ways to prevent asthma attacks.
See your child's healthcare team when necessary. Check in regularly. Don't ignore signs that your child's asthma might not be under control, such as needing to use a quick-relief inhaler too often.
Asthma changes over time. Consulting a health professional can help you make needed treatment adjustments to control symptoms.
Asthma can be hard to diagnose. A healthcare professional considers the symptoms and a child's medical history. Tests may be needed to rule out other conditions, including:
Lung function tests. Healthcare professionals diagnose asthma in children with the same tests used to identify the disease in adults. Spirometry measures how much air a child can exhale and how quickly. A child might have lung function tests at rest, after exercising and after taking asthma medicine.
A peak flow meter is a simple device that measures how hard the child can breathe out.
Another lung function test is brochoprovocation. Using spirometry, this test measures how the lungs react to certain triggers, such as exercise or exposure to cold air.
Certain asthma tests aren't accurate before 5 years of age. For younger children, a health professional will rely on information you and your child provide about symptoms. A trial of asthma medicines may be done to see how your child responds. Sometimes a diagnosis can't be made until later, after months or even years of observing symptoms.
A number of childhood conditions can have symptoms like those caused by asthma. To complicate the diagnosis further, these conditions also commonly happen along with asthma. So a health professional will have to determine whether a child's symptoms are caused by asthma, a condition other than asthma, or both asthma and another condition.
Conditions that can cause asthmalike symptoms include:
Initial treatment depends on the seriousness of the child's asthma. The goal of asthma treatment is to keep symptoms under control, meaning that a child has:
However, if an infant or toddler has frequent or severe wheezing episodes, a health professional might prescribe a medicine to see if it improves symptoms.
Preventive, long-term control medicines reduce the inflammation in a child's airways that leads to symptoms. In most cases, these medicines need to be taken daily.
Types of long-term control medicines include:
Inhaled corticosteroids. These medicines include fluticasone (Flovent Diskus), budesonide (Pulmicort Flexhaler), mometasone (Asmanex HFA), ciclesonide (Alvesco), beclomethasone (Qvar Redihaler) and others. A child might need to use these medicines for several days to weeks before getting the full benefit.
Long-term use of these medicines has been associated with slightly slowed growth in children, but the effect is minor. In most cases, the benefits of good asthma control outweigh the risks of possible side effects.
Combination inhalers. These medicines contain an inhaled corticosteroid plus a long-acting beta agonist (LABA). They include fluticasone and salmeterol (Advair Diskus), budesonide and formoterol (Symbicort), fluticasone and vilanterol (Breo Ellipta), and mometasone and formoterol (Dulera).
In some situations, long-acting beta agonists have been linked to severe asthma attacks. For this reason, LABA medicines should always be given to a child with an inhaler that also contains a corticosteroid. These combination inhalers should be used only for asthma that's not well controlled by other medicines.
Quick-relief medicines quickly open swollen airways. Also called rescue medicines, quick-relief medicines are used as needed for rapid, short-term symptom relief during an asthma attack — or before exercise if a healthcare professional recommends it.
Types of quick-relief medicines include:
If a child's asthma is triggered or worsened by allergies, the child might benefit from allergy treatment, including:
Long-term asthma control medicines such as inhaled corticosteroids are the cornerstone of asthma treatment. These medicines keep asthma under control and make it less likely that a child will have an asthma attack.
If a child does have an asthma flare-up, a quick-relief inhaler, also called a rescue inhaler, can ease symptoms right away. But if long-term control medicines are working properly, a child shouldn't need to use a quick-relief inhaler very often.
Keep a record of how many puffs your child uses each week. If your child often needs to use a quick-relief inhaler, see a healthcare professional. You'll probably need to adjust your child's long-term control medicine.
Inhaled short- and long-term control medicines are used by inhaling a measured dose of medicine.
Work with your child's healthcare professional to create a written asthma action plan. This can be an important part of treatment, especially if your child has severe asthma. An asthma action plan can help you and your child:
Children who have enough coordination and understanding might use a hand-held device called a peak flow meter. A peak flow meter measures how well they can breathe. A written asthma action plan can help you and your child remember what to do when peak flow measurements reach a certain level.
The action plan might use peak flow measurements and symptoms to categorize your child's asthma into zones, such as a green zone, a yellow zone and a red zone. These zones correspond to well-controlled symptoms, partly controlled symptoms and poorly controlled symptoms. This makes tracking your child's asthma easier.
Your child's symptoms and triggers are likely to change over time. Observe symptoms and work with your child's healthcare professional to adjust medicines as needed.
If your child's symptoms are completely controlled for a time, your child's healthcare team might recommend lowering doses or stopping asthma medicines. This is known as step-down treatment. If your child's asthma isn't as well controlled, the health professional might want to increase, change or add medicines. This is known as step-up treatment.
While some alternative remedies are used for asthma, in most cases more research is needed to see how well they work and to determine possible side effects. Alternative treatments to consider include breathing techniques. These include structured breathing programs, such as the Buteyko breathing technique, the BrEX method and yoga breathing exercises.
Taking steps to reduce your child's exposure to asthma triggers can lessen the possibility of asthma attacks. Steps to help avoid triggers vary depending on what triggers your child's asthma. Here are some things that may help:
It can be stressful to help a child manage asthma. Keep these tips in mind to make life as easy as possible:
Use a written asthma action plan. Work with your child's healthcare team to develop your child's action plan. Give a copy to all of your child's caregivers, such as child care providers, teachers, coaches and the parents of your child's friends.
Following a written plan can help you and your child identify symptoms early. An organized plan provides important information on how to treat your child's asthma from day to day and how to deal with an asthma attack.
Be encouraging. Focus attention on what your child can do, not on limitations. Involve teachers, school nurses, coaches, relatives and friends in helping your child manage asthma.
Encourage typical play and activity. Don't limit your child's activities out of fear of an asthma attack — work with your child's care team to control exercise-induced symptoms.
You're likely to start by taking your child to someone on your primary healthcare team or your child's pediatrician. However, when you call to set up an appointment, you may be referred to an allergist, a lung doctor, called a pulmonologist, or another specialist. Here's some information to help you get ready for your child's appointment.
Make a list of:
For asthma or asthmalike symptoms, questions to ask include:
Don't hesitate to ask other questions.
You'll likely be asked a few questions, including:
© 2025 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. All rights reserved. Terms of Use