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HomeHealth & FitnessAsthma vs. COPD: Why early differentiation matters, according to pulmonologist

Asthma vs. COPD: Why early differentiation matters, according to pulmonologist

Respiratory diseases such as Asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) are on the rise partly because of pollution, smoking, lifestyle etc. Although they both impact the airways and result in difficulty breathing, they are different in origin, mechanism and long-term course. It is important to distinguish between the two in the early phase due to management and treatment differences

October 15, 2025 / 15:51 IST
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Asthma and COPD may look similar but differ in causes, symptoms, and treatment. Learn how to tell them apart and protect your lung health early. (Image: Pexels)

Asthma is predominantly an allergic or immune-mediated disease and often starts in childhood or early adult life. It's often brought on by allergens, dust or cold air, and symptoms can vary or ease with medication. By contrast, COPD — comprising chronic bronchitis and emphysema — occurs slowly over time, usually because of long-term exposure to cigarette smoke or other environmental pollutants. Long-term airway narrowing and lung damage Unlike asthma, with COPD, the narrowing of your airways is not fully reversible.

Prevention is better than cure and the earlier you can differentiate between asthma and COPD, the sooner you can take steps to mitigate its impact with suitable intervention that benefits from personalized therapy leading to a better quality of life,” says Dr Vikas Mittal, Director and Pulmonologist at CK Birla Hospital, Delhi. Understanding what makes them different can help patients find the correct diagnosis and protect their lungs from irreversible damage with lifestyle interventions, medications and preventive care.

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Also Read: World Asthma Day 2025: 6 tips to manage asthma symptoms effectively, avoid triggers

1. Age of onset

One difference between asthma and COPD is when they tend to begin.

2. Causes and risk factors

Asthma is mostly caused by a genetic predisposition and by allergic irritants like pollen, dust, smoke, or cat dander. Asthma will likely occur in people with a family history of asthma or allergies.
Conversely, COPD is usually the outcome of long-term exposure to an irritant, primarily tobacco smoke, air pollution, biomass fuel, or occupational chemicals and dust. Present smokers and individuals residing in environmentally polluted areas are quite likely to be at higher risk. 3. Nature of airway obstruction