If you’re living with a lung condition like asthma, COPD, bronchiectasis, or aspergillosis, you may be asked to have a lung function test. These tests help your medical team understand how well your lungs are working — and how best to treat you.


🌬️ What Are Lung Function Tests?

Lung function tests (also called pulmonary function tests) measure:

  • How fast and deeply you can breathe

  • How well your lungs move oxygen into your blood

  • How much air gets trapped in your lungs


🔬 Main Tests and What They Measure

Test What It Measures Why It Matters
Spirometry Speed and volume of air breathed out Shows obstruction or reversibility (e.g. in asthma)
Lung volumes Total size of the lungs and air left after exhaling Detects air trapping and hyperinflation
Gas transfer (DLCO) How well gases pass from lungs to blood Can show scarring, emphysema, or CPA
Bronchodilator test Measures response to inhaler Helps diagnose asthma or ABPA

🧠 What Do These Tests Tell Us?

Here’s how different conditions show up in lung function testing:

🟢 Asthma

  • Airways are narrowed, but often improve with inhalers.

  • Shows obstruction that improves significantly after a bronchodilator (reversible).

  • Lung volumes usually normal; DLCO often normal or high.

🔵 COPD

  • Shows irreversible obstruction — lungs are stiff and narrowed.

  • Often shows air trapping and hyperinflation.

  • DLCO is reduced, especially in emphysema.

🟠 Bronchiectasis

  • May show mild-to-moderate obstruction or mixed patterns.

  • Sometimes reversible, depending on overlapping asthma or infection.

  • Lung volumes and DLCO often normal unless CPA or emphysema is also present.

🟣 Aspergillosis

  • ABPA: Like asthma — obstruction, often with reversibility, air trapping, high IgE and eosinophils.

  • CPA: May cause a restrictive pattern (lower lung volumes) or reduced DLCO if fibrosis or cavities are present.

  • Aspergillus bronchitis: May look like bronchiectasis with some obstruction.


💨 What Is Air Trapping?

Air trapping happens when you breathe in, but can’t get all the air back out. Some air stays stuck in the lungs.

Sign What It Means
High residual volume (RV) Too much air remains after breathing out
Expiratory CT scan shows dark areas Parts of the lungs aren’t emptying properly

Common in:

  • Asthma

  • ABPA

  • Bronchiectasis

  • COPD


🎈 What Is Hyperinflation?

Hyperinflation means your lungs are constantly overfilled with air — not just trapped temporarily, but stretched long-term.

Sign What It Means
High total lung capacity (TLC) Lungs are too large due to long-term air trapping
Flattened diaphragm Lungs are pressing downward on breathing muscles

Common in:

  • Severe asthma

  • Emphysema (COPD)

  • ABPA (when uncontrolled)


📊 Summary Table

Condition Common Lung Test Features
Asthma Obstruction, reversible, normal DLCO
ABPA Obstruction, reversible, air trapping, high IgE
COPD Fixed obstruction, hyperinflation, low DLCO
Bronchiectasis Variable obstruction, sometimes reversible
CPA Restriction or mixed pattern, reduced DLCO
Aspergillus bronchitis Similar to bronchiectasis, sputum positive for fungus

💬 Why These Tests Matter

  • They help distinguish what’s causing your symptoms.

  • They track whether treatment is working (inhalers, steroids, antifungals).

  • They identify complications like scarring, cavities, or fungal infection.

  • They help guide eligibility for biologic drugs or oxygen therapy.


📣 Ask Your Doctor:

  • Have I had a bronchodilator response test?

  • Do I have air trapping or hyperinflation?

  • Should we test for Aspergillus (IgG, IgE, sputum)?

  • Would a CT scan add helpful detail?

Path: Start » Diagnostics » 🩺 Lung Function Tests Explained: What They Tell Us About Asthma, COPD, Bronchiectasis, and Aspergillosis

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