List typical clinical features.
Typical features: The following features are usually intermittent and can occur either sporadically or in response to an asthma trigger.
Persistent, dry cough that worsens at night, with exercise, or on exposure to triggers/irritants (e.g., cold air, allergens, smoke)
End-expiratory wheezes
Dyspnea (shortness of breath)
Chest tightness
Prolonged expiratory phase on auscultation
Hyperresonance to lung percussion
List other findings.
Features of common comorbid conditions (e.g., atopic conditions like allergic rhinitis, or eczema)
Acute asthma exacerbation is covered in detail separately.
Characteristic examination findings may not be present between episodes of asthma exacerbation!
List subtypes and variants.
Adult-onset asthma: an uncommon phenotype in which patients present with symptoms for the first time in adulthood; more likely to be nonallergic and involves a poor response to standard treatment
Cough variant asthma: a form of asthma in which the predominant symptom is chronic dry cough, without other characteristic symptoms of asthma, e.g., wheeze, congestion, dyspnea (see also “Cough”)
Exercise-induced bronchoconstriction: covered separately in its own article
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