Key points
- Exercise is one of the most helpful non-drug tools for many people living with aspergillosis.
- Regular physical activity can improve breathlessness, strength, stamina, mood, confidence and quality of life.
- The best approach is usually little and often, rather than occasional intensive exercise.
- Do not compare yourself with others. Everyone has different lungs, treatments, fitness levels and limits.
- Respiratory physiotherapists and pulmonary rehabilitation programmes can help you exercise safely and confidently.
- Walking, cycling, swimming, rowing, gentle yoga, Tai Chi and singing can all be useful, depending on the individual.
- People with aspergillosis should take extra care around mould-heavy environments such as compost, leaf mould, sheds and building dust.
Contents
- Why exercise matters in aspergillosis
- The activity and breathlessness cycle
- Benefits of exercise
- Specific issues for aspergillosis patients
- How to start safely
- Activities that may help
- Pulmonary rehabilitation and physiotherapy
- The golden rule: little and often
- What clinicians want patients to know
- Real-life examples
- When to seek medical advice
- Frequently asked questions
- Related articles and further support
Why exercise matters in aspergillosis
Living with aspergillosis can be physically and emotionally challenging. Breathlessness, coughing, fatigue, disturbed sleep, medication side effects and reduced confidence can all make it tempting to become less active.
Unfortunately, becoming less active can make symptoms feel worse over time. Muscles weaken, fitness falls, balance may worsen and everyday activities such as walking, climbing stairs, shopping or playing with grandchildren can become harder.
This process is often called deconditioning. It does not mean the symptoms are imaginary. It means the body has lost some of its ability to cope with activity.
The encouraging news is that exercise can help reverse part of this process.
Exercise cannot cure aspergillosis, but it can help the body use oxygen more efficiently, strengthen muscles, improve confidence and make daily life easier.
Importantly, people may feel better and do more even when their lung function tests do not change very much.
The activity and breathlessness cycle
Many people with chronic lung disease become trapped in a difficult cycle:
The deconditioning cycle
Breathlessness → Less activity → Loss of fitness → More breathlessness → Even less activity
Exercise helps by creating a healthier cycle:
The rebuilding cycle
Gentle activity → Stronger muscles → More confidence → Easier daily tasks → Better quality of life
This is why small, regular activity can be so powerful. The aim is not to force the lungs to work harder. The aim is to help the whole body work better.
Benefits of exercise
Improved breathlessness
Exercise may make you breathless while you are doing it, but regular activity often reduces breathlessness during everyday tasks. This happens because muscles become stronger and more efficient, so they need less effort to perform the same activity.
More energy
Many patients report feeling less tired once they build a regular routine. Exercise uses energy in the short term, but over time it can improve stamina and reduce the effort needed for daily life.
Stronger muscles
Long-term illness, hospital admissions, inactivity and corticosteroid treatment can all contribute to muscle weakness. Strength exercises can help rebuild leg strength, improve balance and support independence.
Better mood and confidence
Living with aspergillosis can affect mental wellbeing. Exercise can help reduce anxiety, stress and low mood. It can also restore a sense of control and achievement.
Improved bone health
This is especially important for people who have taken long-term corticosteroids. Weight-bearing activity and strength training can help protect bone strength and reduce the risk of osteoporosis.
Better daily function
For many patients, the most important benefit is practical: being able to walk further, climb stairs more easily, go shopping, travel, garden, socialise or enjoy family life with more confidence.
Specific issues for aspergillosis patients
Avoiding high mould exposure
Aspergillus is commonly found in soil, compost, decaying vegetation, damp buildings and dust. Some activities can expose people to large numbers of fungal spores.
Activities that may increase exposure include:
- Handling compost
- Turning soil
- Clearing leaf piles
- Wood chipping
- Spreading bark or mulch
- Cleaning sheds, garages, lofts or basements
- Working around mouldy materials
- Construction or demolition environments
Outdoor exercise such as walking, cycling and running is generally encouraged. However, it is sensible to avoid places where mould, compost, dust or decaying vegetation are being heavily disturbed.
Some people may choose to wear a well-fitting FFP2 or FFP3 mask for unavoidable dusty or mould-heavy tasks, but avoidance is usually better where possible.
Haemoptysis: coughing blood
People with Chronic Pulmonary Aspergillosis (CPA), lung cavities or aspergillomas may sometimes cough blood. This is called haemoptysis.
If you have recent, recurrent or significant haemoptysis, discuss exercise with your respiratory team. Most routine activity remains safe for many people, but vigorous exertion may need to be paused or modified during periods of active bleeding.
Oxygen levels
Some people with aspergillosis also have bronchiectasis, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), fibrosis, previous tuberculosis damage or other lung scarring. In these situations, oxygen levels may fall during exertion even when resting oxygen levels are normal.
If breathlessness feels out of proportion, or if you notice unusually low oxygen saturations during activity, discuss this with your respiratory team. You may benefit from an exercise assessment or pulmonary rehabilitation referral.
Fatigue and boom-and-bust activity
Aspergillosis-related fatigue can be different from normal tiredness. It may be influenced by chronic inflammation, active infection, poor sleep, anxiety, medication side effects and reduced fitness.
Many patients experience a boom-and-bust pattern:
Good day → Do too much → Several days recovering
Regular, steady activity is usually more helpful than occasional bursts of intensive effort.
Steroid-related muscle weakness
People who have taken long-term corticosteroids may develop muscle weakness, particularly around the thighs and hips. This can make standing from a chair, climbing stairs and walking uphill more difficult.
Strength exercises such as sit-to-stands, step-ups and resistance band work can be particularly helpful.
Adrenal insufficiency
Some patients who have used long-term corticosteroids develop adrenal insufficiency. These patients should understand their sick day rules and discuss unusually strenuous exercise, endurance events or major hikes with their healthcare team.
Most routine gentle or moderate exercise is safe, but unusually demanding activity may require additional planning.
Asthma, ABPA and exercise symptoms
Many people with Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis (ABPA) also have asthma. Exercise can sometimes trigger wheeze, cough or chest tightness.
This does not usually mean exercise should be avoided. Good asthma control, appropriate inhaler use, gradual warm-up and pacing can make a major difference. Speak to your healthcare team if exercise regularly triggers asthma symptoms.
How to start safely
Start from where you are
Your starting point is your starting point. It does not matter what someone else can do. If you can only walk for two or three minutes, that is still a valid place to begin.
Use the talk test
During moderate exercise, you should usually be able to speak in short sentences. If you cannot speak at all, you may be pushing too hard.
Build gradually
Small increases are usually safer and more sustainable than sudden changes. For example, increasing a walk from five minutes to six or seven minutes may be more helpful than trying to double it immediately.
Plan rest periods
Rest is not failure. Many people with lung disease do better with short bursts of activity separated by planned rests.
Track progress gently
Some patients find it motivating to keep a simple record of walks, steps, strength exercises or how breathless they feel. The aim is encouragement, not pressure.
A simple beginner example
Example starter plan
- Week 1–2: Walk for 5 minutes most days, or less if needed.
- Week 3–4: Add one or two minutes when comfortable.
- Week 5–6: Add gentle strength exercises, such as sit-to-stands.
- Ongoing: Continue gradual increases, with rest days when needed.
This is only an example. Some people will need to start lower, while others may safely start higher.
Activities that may help
The best exercise is usually the one you enjoy and can keep doing regularly.
Walking
Walking is one of the simplest and most effective activities. It requires no special equipment, can be adapted to most fitness levels and is easy to build gradually.
Cycling
Cycling, including use of a stationary exercise bike, can improve stamina while placing less strain on the joints than running.
Swimming
Swimming can be helpful because the water supports body weight. However, some people with asthma find chlorinated pools trigger symptoms.
Rowing
Rowing machines can provide both cardiovascular and strength benefits. Start gently and focus on technique.
Strength training
Strength training does not have to mean heavy weights. Useful exercises may include:
- Sit-to-stands from a chair
- Step-ups
- Wall push-ups
- Resistance bands
- Light hand weights
Gentle yoga and Tai Chi
Many patients enjoy gentle yoga or Tai Chi because they combine movement, balance, breathing awareness, posture and relaxation. Chair-based versions may be useful for people with reduced mobility.
Singing
Singing may not sound like exercise, but many people with lung conditions find it helpful. It can support breathing control, posture, confidence, social connection and respiratory muscle coordination.
Some patients enjoy local choirs or Singing for Lung Health groups.
Pulmonary rehabilitation and physiotherapy
You do not have to do this alone.
A respiratory physiotherapist can help assess your current ability and design a programme that suits your symptoms, fitness level and goals.
A specialist physiotherapist may help with:
- Breathlessness management
- Pacing strategies
- Strength and stamina building
- Airway clearance techniques where appropriate
- Confidence around movement
- Safe return to activity after illness
Pulmonary rehabilitation
Pulmonary rehabilitation is a structured programme that usually combines supervised exercise, education, breathing techniques and self-management advice.
Many people with chronic lung disease describe pulmonary rehabilitation as one of the most helpful interventions they have received.
If you have ongoing breathlessness, reduced exercise tolerance or loss of confidence, ask your GP, respiratory consultant, specialist nurse or physiotherapist whether pulmonary rehabilitation may be suitable for you.
The golden rule: little and often
Exercise with aspergillosis: the golden rule
Little and often is usually better than a lot all at once.
Do not compare yourself with other people, including other aspergillosis patients.
Everyone has different lungs, different treatments, different ages and different levels of fitness.
Focus on your own starting point and your own progress.
Do not try to keep up with others. You do you.
One of the biggest traps is comparing yourself with other patients. Someone else may complete a long-distance walk, climb a mountain, run a race or cycle hundreds of miles. That can be inspiring, but it should not become your target.
Instead, ask yourself:
Am I a little stronger, fitter or more confident than I was a few months ago?
Success may mean:
- Walking for five minutes when previously you could only manage three
- Climbing stairs more comfortably
- Shopping with less breathlessness
- Doing light gardening safely
- Enjoying a holiday more easily
- Playing with children or grandchildren
- Needing fewer rests during ordinary daily tasks
These achievements matter.
For most people living with aspergillosis, consistency beats intensity.
What clinicians want patients to know
Exercise is not about pushing through at all costs
Healthcare professionals usually want patients to remain as active as safely possible, but that does not mean ignoring symptoms or forcing yourself to keep up with others.
The safest approach is usually to build gradually, pace yourself and ask for help when symptoms change.
Exercise should support your life, not punish your body.
Real-life examples
The person who walks five minutes a day
For someone recovering from illness or a hospital admission, a five-minute daily walk may be a major achievement. If that becomes six minutes, then eight minutes, that is progress.
The person who completes a long-distance walk
Some people with aspergillosis manage major challenges such as long-distance walking routes. These stories can be inspiring, but they are not a standard everyone else must meet.
The person who joins a singing group
For some patients, a singing group may be more enjoyable and sustainable than a gym. Singing can support breathing control and confidence while also providing social contact.
The person who returns to gardening carefully
Gardening can be enjoyable and active, but compost, leaf mould and disturbed soil may contain high levels of fungal spores. Some patients adapt by avoiding compost handling, asking for help with mould-heavy tasks, wearing protective masks where appropriate, and choosing lower-risk gardening activities.
When to seek medical advice
Stop exercising and seek medical advice if you experience:
- Chest pain
- Severe or unusual breathlessness
- Dizziness or fainting
- Significant haemoptysis, meaning coughing blood
- Sudden worsening of symptoms
- New palpitations or heart rhythm symptoms
- Oxygen levels much lower than usual, if you monitor them
- Exercise tolerance that suddenly falls without an obvious reason
Always speak to your healthcare team if you are unsure whether exercise is safe for you, especially if your symptoms have recently changed.
Frequently asked questions
Can I exercise if I have aspergillosis?
Yes, many people with aspergillosis benefit from regular physical activity. Exercise should be adapted to your symptoms, fitness level and medical conditions. Ask your healthcare team for advice if you have severe breathlessness, recent haemoptysis or unstable symptoms.
Can exercise improve breathlessness?
Yes. Exercise can improve muscle efficiency, stamina and confidence. This can reduce breathlessness during everyday activities, even if lung function test results do not change significantly.
What is the best exercise for Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis?
There is no single best exercise for Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis. Walking, cycling, swimming, gentle yoga, strength training and pulmonary rehabilitation can all be helpful. The best activity is one you can do safely and regularly.
Can pulmonary rehabilitation help aspergillosis patients?
Many people with chronic respiratory symptoms, bronchiectasis or reduced exercise tolerance benefit from pulmonary rehabilitation. It combines supervised exercise, education, breathing techniques and self-management support.
Should people with aspergillosis avoid gardening?
Not necessarily, but some gardening activities can expose people to high levels of Aspergillus spores. Handling compost, turning soil, clearing leaves and working with mulch may carry higher exposure. Lower-risk gardening activities may be more suitable for some patients.
Can exercise help steroid-related muscle weakness?
Yes. Strength exercises can help rebuild muscle strength lost through long-term corticosteroid treatment, illness or inactivity. Simple exercises such as sit-to-stands, step-ups and resistance bands can be useful.
Is singing useful for people with lung disease?
Many people with lung disease find singing helpful for breathing control, posture, confidence and social connection. Some areas offer Singing for Lung Health groups.
Should I exercise when I am tired?
Gentle movement may help on some tired days, but severe fatigue may mean your body needs rest. Pacing is important. Try to avoid repeated boom-and-bust cycles where you do too much on a good day and then need several days to recover.
Take-home message
Exercise is one of the most powerful tools available to help people living with aspergillosis maintain independence, strength and quality of life.
Move more, but move at your own pace.
Find something you enjoy.
Ask for help when you need it.
Little and often beats heroic efforts.
Do not compare yourself with others.
You do you.
Related articles
You may also find these aspergillosis.org articles helpful:
- Why Am I Breathless When My Oxygen Levels Are Normal?
- Physiotherapy for Aspergillosis
- Living with Aspergillosis
- Managing Fatigue in Aspergillosis
- Steroids and Adrenal Insufficiency
- Bronchiectasis and Aspergillosis
- What is Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis (ABPA)?
- What is Chronic Pulmonary Asprgillosis (CPA)?
Further support and information
Author and review information
Author: Graham Atherton, National Aspergillosis Centre
Medical review: National Aspergillosis Centre Clinical Team
Last reviewed: June 2026
This article provides general information and should not replace advice from your own healthcare team.
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