HomeHealth & FitnessPulmonologist explains women’s lung health: Understanding the hidden risks and symptoms

Pulmonologist explains women’s lung health: Understanding the hidden risks and symptoms

Dd you know estrogen and progesterone have a bearing on the nature of the female lung reaction to disease and to environmental stress? To know more interesting facts about the lung health of women, read on.

October 24, 2025 / 16:01 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Women have smaller lungs, and their airways can respond more robustly to irritants like smoke, pollution and dust.
Women have smaller lungs, and their airways can respond more robustly to irritants like smoke, pollution and dust (Picture Credit: Unsplash)

Lung health can be especially challenging for women. This means that they are more at risk for respiratory diseases early in life. Acknowledgment of such sex-based differences are crucial to advance the prevention, diagnosis and care for women’s lung health.

Maintaining strong lungs is crucial to overall health, but it is an aspect of our well-being that often goes ignored—especially among women. Though both men and women are afflicted by respiratory diseases, evidence is mounting that women experience them differently. These differences have both biological and environmental roots that determine not only the development of diseases but also their course and treatment.

Story continues below Advertisement

Women have smaller lungs, and their airways can respond more robustly to irritants like smoke, pollution and dust. Hormonal variations such as menstruation, pregnancy and menopause may also affect lung function and symptom severity. Lifestyle-related factors, such as workplace exposures and even cooking haze can further increase the burden of chronic respiratory disorders in women, more so in developing nations.

It is important to acknowledge these gender-specific differences in lung health,” says Dr. Vikas Mittal, Director – Pulmonologist CK Birla Hospital ®, Delhi. Women with less exposure to risk factors, including smoking, may develop diseases like asthma, COPD or lung cancer at younger ages and with worse symptoms than men. Awareness of these differences can result in earlier diagnosis, better treatment and better outcomes for women’s respiratory health.