Last reviewed: April 2026

Key points

  • Exposure to mould is not the same as having aspergillosis.
  • Aspergillus is a common environmental fungus that most people inhale daily.
  • “Mycotoxin” and “detox” explanations are common online but are not part of standard diagnosis.
  • Symptoms usually arise from a combination of lung disease, infection, inflammation, and environment.
  • Diagnosis relies on clinical tests (scans, blood tests, microbiology), not environmental testing alone.
  • Specialist home testing is sometimes used—but only in specific clinical situations.

A guide for patients and carers

Many people with lung conditions come across information linking mould exposure, toxins, and Aspergillus infections. Some of this information can be helpful—but much of it can also be confusing.

This article explains the most common misunderstandings and what current medical practice actually relies on.

Important: Some tests measure exposure—but medical diagnosis requires evidence of disease.

Contents

Why this topic is confusing

  • Mould is visible and easy to focus on
  • Symptoms (fatigue, cough, breathlessness) are non-specific
  • Online information often mixes different conditions together

This can lead to the idea that one single cause—such as “mould toxicity”—explains everything. In practice, respiratory conditions are usually more complex.

Mould exposure vs Aspergillus disease

Mould exposure

  • Common in homes and outdoor air
  • Can irritate airways
  • May worsen symptoms

Aspergillus disease

  • Occurs in specific medical contexts
  • Related to lung structure and immune response
  • Requires clinical diagnosis
Being exposed to mould does not mean you will develop aspergillosis.

Important context: Aspergillus spores are present in the air we breathe every day. Most people inhale them without developing disease.

Mycotoxins and “detox” claims

You may see references to:

  • “Mycotoxin illness”
  • “Die-off reactions”
  • “Binders” to remove toxins

These ideas are widely discussed online, but they are not part of standard medical diagnosis or treatment for Aspergillus lung conditions.

This does not mean symptoms are not real. It means they are usually explained through:

  • Inflammation
  • Infection
  • Underlying lung disease

Why “mould toxin tests” are not used diagnostically

Exposure is common

Many people have detectable environmental exposure, so results are not specific.

Results do not match symptoms reliably

Levels do not consistently correlate with disease or severity.

Lack of standardisation

Different labs use different methods, making interpretation difficult.

Not part of clinical guidelines

Major respiratory guidelines do not include these tests in diagnosing Aspergillus conditions.

Risk of confusion

  • May cause unnecessary concern
  • May lead to unproven treatments
These tests may detect exposure—but they do not diagnose Aspergillus disease.

Why symptoms don’t have one single cause

Symptoms often arise from a combination of:

  • Underlying lung disease
  • Inflammation
  • Infection (fungal or bacterial)
  • Environmental triggers (pollution, damp)

This is why symptoms can fluctuate and may not respond to a single explanation or treatment.

How Aspergillus conditions are actually diagnosed

Diagnosis is based on a combination of:

  • CT imaging
  • Blood tests (e.g. IgE, IgG)
  • Microbiology (sputum or bronchoscopy)

Environmental testing alone is not sufficient to diagnose disease.

When home testing may be used

In some cases, specialist teams (for example via the Mycology Reference Centre Manchester) may arrange targeted environmental sampling.

This is different from commercial testing and focuses on:

  • Specific clinically relevant fungi (e.g. Aspergillus species)
  • Known allergens or pathogens

Why it is done

  • Established Aspergillus-related disease
  • Unexplained or persistent symptoms
  • Concern about ongoing exposure

This testing is used to answer specific clinical questions and is interpreted alongside medical findings.

Specialist home testing is selective and clinically guided—not a routine diagnostic tool.

What matters most for patients

  • Work with your clinical team for diagnosis and treatment
  • Address damp and mould in your home
  • Focus on practical steps that improve symptoms
  • Avoid relying on a single explanation for complex symptoms

Final takeaway

Mould, environment, and Aspergillus are connected—but not in a simple cause-and-effect way.

Understanding this helps you focus on what is most likely to improve your health: appropriate treatment, good living conditions, and ongoing monitoring.


Author: aspergillosis.org

Note: Educational content only – not medical advice.

Path: Start » Environment » Housing & Damp » Mould, “Toxins” and Aspergillus: Understanding What’s True and What Isn’t

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