Your healthcare professional may use several tests to check how well your lungs are working.
Spirometry
This is the main test doctors generally use to diagnose asthma in people 5 years or older.
To help determine how well your lungs are working, you take a deep breath and forcefully breathe out into a tube connected to a spirometer. This records both the amount of air you exhale and how quickly you exhale. If certain measurements are below usual for a person your age, it may mean that asthma has narrowed your airways.
After taking lung test measurements, you may be asked to inhale an asthma drug to open air passages and then do the test again. Showing significant improvement after taking the medicine could mean you have asthma.
Challenge test
If your spirometer results are typical or near typical, your healthcare professional might try to trigger asthma symptoms. This is done by having you breathe in a substance that causes the airways to narrow in people with asthma, such as methacholine (meth-uh-KO-leen).
If you appear to have asthma triggered by exercise, called exercise-induced asthma, you may be asked to do physical activity to see whether it triggers symptoms.
After either action, you'll retake the spirometry test. If your spirometry measurements remain typical, you probably don't have asthma. But if your measurements have fallen significantly, it's possible you do.
Lung tests in children
Lung tests in children under age 5 are not typically done. Instead, diagnosis is generally based on a child's symptoms, medical history and physical examination. It can be especially difficult to diagnose asthma in young children because there are many conditions that cause asthma-like symptoms in this age group.
If your child's healthcare professional suspects asthma, your child may be prescribed a bronchodilator — a drug that opens the airways. If your child's symptoms improve after using the bronchodilator, your child may have asthma.
Exhaled nitric oxide test
You breathe into a tube connected to a machine that measures the amount of nitric oxide gas in your breath. Nitric oxide gas is produced by the body usually, but high levels in your breath can mean that your airways are inflamed — a sign of asthma.