Sudden difficulty taking breaths immediately after a cardio stint isn’t always exercise-induced asthma.

        If you think that your recent struggle with inhaling or taking breaths was your first bout with exercise-induced asthma, you may actually have an entirely different condition: vocal cord dysfunction (or disorder).

          Symptoms of vocal cord dysfunction and exercise-induced asthma are nearly identical.

Symptoms between these two are so alike, in fact, that many athletes or workout enthusiasts are misdiagnosed with exercise-induced asthma, when in fact, they’ve been having bouts of vocal cord disorder.

However, this doesn’t mean you can’t, by coincidence, have BOTH conditions—which makes proper diagnosis even more tricky.

The misdiagnosis leads to inappropriate, and therefore ineffective, treatment, say researchers from Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center.

Vocal cord dysfunction goes by several different names, including paradoxical vocal cord fold motion disorder (PVFMD).

Asthma inhalers are useless for this condition, which is managed by several approaches such as Botox injections, biofeedback and vocal cord retraining therapy.

Vocal cord disorder can occur during or right after exercise, but can be triggered also by emotional stress.

It can be caused by environmental irritants that one gulps in during the heavy breathing of exercise.

The vocal cords constrict and obstruct the air flow to the lungs, making inhalation labored.

Another symptom of vocal cord dysfunction, besides difficulty breathing in, is coughing—not necessarily a hacking type of cough.

It can be a sudden cough, like something is suddenly deep in the throat. The cough may immediately precipitate the trouble breathing.

Thirty percent of the Wexner study group reported coughing during exercise.

However, vocal cord dysfunction that produces coughing doesn’t always produce the trouble inhaling.

Diagnosis of vocal cord dysfunction, post-exercise, can be made with a flexible fiberoptic laryngoscope.

Vocal cord disorder and exercise-induced asthma both can cause a whistling or “respiratory sound” upon inhaling, and diagnosis cannot be made based on what the “wheezing” of one condition sounds like compared to the other.

“PVFMD symptoms can often mimic asthma,” says Anna Marcinow, MD, study co-author.

She adds that up to “40 percent of people with asthma also have PVFMD — so it’s typical for an athlete to get the asthma diagnosed correctly, but not the vocal cord dysfunction.”

Though frightening, vocal cord dysfunction will not typically cause a person to pass out or suffocate.

Lorra Garrick has been covering medical, fitness and cybersecurity topics for many years, having written thousands of articles for print magazines and websites, including as a ghostwriter. She’s also a former ACE-certified personal trainer.  
 
 
Top image: Shutterstock/ nd3000
Source: sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/04/130412192400.htm