Imagine going from a mild, routine sneeze to being completely unable to speak a full sentence in under ten minutes. It sounds extreme, but it is the documented timeline for thunderstorm asthma, a condition that catches thousands of allergy sufferers off guard every year.
The world took notice after a single November storm in Melbourne sent more than 10,000 suffocating patients to emergency rooms in one night in 2016. Most had never used an inhaler in their lives. They simply had hay fever. Within minutes of that storm, the same airways that had only ever produced a sneeze were in full bronchospasm.
India's pre-monsoon season recreates those same conditions annually, rising grass pollen, building humidity, and sudden violent thunderstorms rolling across Peninsular India before the monsoon settles in. Most patients here have never been told that combination can be fatal. This article covers the science behind why storms turn ordinary pollen into a respiratory emergency, who faces the greatest risk, and the steps you need to take before the sky turns dark.
The symptoms chest tightness, wheezing, shortness of breath, sudden cough look identical to an asthma attack. What separates thunderstorm asthma from a routine allergy flare is speed. Patients describe going from mildly sneezy to unable to speak in sentences within minutes.
Thunderstorm asthma escalates rapidly because patients inhale a massive concentration of microscopic pollen particles within a very short time. These particles reach deep into the lower airways, triggering sudden, widespread bronchospasm.
Unlike routine asthma attacks, exposure in thunderstorm asthma is massive and simultaneous, leading to rapid airflow obstruction and sometimes respiratory failure within minutes.
Dr. Aishwarya C, MD Pulmonology, Consultant Pulmonologist at Vagus Hospital, Bengaluru
Dr. Aishwarya cautions regarding the warning signs that should never be ignored during or after a storm:
Sudden wheeze
Chest tightness
Difficulty breathing
Persistent cough during or after thunderstorms
Note: Antihistamines will not help with thunderstorm asthma. Thunderstorm asthma primarily causes constriction in the airway, only a bronchodilator reliever inhaler addresses that.
During a thunderstorm, pollen grains rupture on contact with moisture and release thousands of tiny particles fine enough to reach the deepest airways. What that doesn't explain is why some people collapse while their neighbour, same storm, same pollen count, walks home without a symptom.
Melbourne researchers found the answer in a three-factor profile:
sensitisation to ryegrass pollen,
a diagnosis of allergic rhinitis, and
being outdoors when the storm hit.
Patients who checked all three boxes faced the worst outcomes. Only one of the three is within a patient's control on the day, whether they go outside. The ethnic data from Melbourne was harder to ignore. Six of the ten who died were of Asian or Indian origin. Across the broader cohort, Indian and South Asian patients carried a relative risk of death more than four times higher than non-Asian patients (Lancet Planetary Health, 2018). Australian health authorities now specifically include South Asian communities in their annual thunderstorm asthma advisories. The underlying reasons remain under investigation, sensitisation profiles, under-diagnosed baseline asthma, and poor preventer adherence have each been proposed, and none has been ruled out.
A patient with hay fever can develop thunderstorm asthma even without a prior asthma diagnosis. If a patient barely made it through such an episode, urgent evaluation for undiagnosed asthma, including spirometry and assessment for airway hyperreactivity, is essential.
Dr. Aishwarya C, MD Pulmonology, Consultant Pulmonologist at Vagus Hospital, Bengaluru
Dr. Aishwarya notes that these patients should ideally have:
Been screened for asthma symptoms like wheeze or chest tightness.
Received education about avoiding outdoor exposure during thunderstorms
India's grass pollen season peaks between September and December, but the danger window for thunderstorm asthma opens earlier, April to June, when pre-monsoon convective storms move most frequently across the Deccan plateau and Peninsular India. Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune, Chennai, and Nagpur all sit within this corridor, and all experience the heat-then-storm sequence that makes this period particularly hazardous.
The infrastructure gap makes it worse. Australia has real-time pollen monitoring, city-level thunderstorm asthma alerts, and a public emergency app. India has none of this. There is no national pollen count service, no standardised thunderstorm asthma protocol in emergency departments, and no public alert system, set against a country where an estimated 37.5 million people live with asthma and roughly one in five adolescents carries allergic rhinitis, most of it untreated and unmonitored.
The clinical consequences of that gap are not abstract. "The most dangerous outcome is delayed recognition of a rapidly evolving respiratory emergency across an entire community," says Dr. Aishwarya C, Consultant Pulmonologist at Vagus Hospital, Bengaluru. "Without pollen surveillance or thunderstorm alerts, patients have no way of knowing they are entering a high-risk window. Emergency departments may record early cases as anxiety, a viral illness, or a simple allergy, and high-risk individuals go unidentified until they arrive in severe bronchospasm or hypoxemic respiratory failure."
Dr. Aishwarya C expresses that, primary care physicians should be able to:
Identify patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis before monsoon season
Ask screening questions for occult asthma
Perform spirometry where feasible
Educate patients regarding thunderstorm exposure risk
Ensure high-risk individuals know when to seek emergency care
Prescribe appropriate controller therapy if asthma is suspected or confirmed
"There has been a noticeable shift in respiratory disease patterns over recent years, we are seeing increased asthma exacerbations and more weather-triggered respiratory emergencies in urban Indian populations. Climate change contributes through rising temperatures, altered rainfall patterns, increased humidity, higher pollen loads, fungal spore proliferation, and worsening particulate air pollution. These factors increase airway inflammation and allergen exposure”, explains Dr. Aishwarya.
Across South and Central India, the weeks before the monsoon follow a predictable pattern: sustained heat at 42–45°C, then sudden convective storms. The instinct when the storm arrives is relief. For anyone with hay fever, that instinct is dangerous.
The highest-risk window is the hour before the rain, when outflow winds are already gusty and pollen is concentrated at ground level. Research confirms that heat-related dehydration reduces airway surface hydration, which increases bronchoconstriction. A sensitised airway that is also dried out by days of heat is more vulnerable than a normally hydrated one.
If a child is both overheated and wheezing after being outdoors before a storm, treat the breathing emergency first.
Heat exhaustion and thunderstorm asthma can present in the same hour. Parents and patients need to tell them apart:
Simple anticipatory counselling can significantly reduce severe respiratory exacerbations.
Dr. Aishwarya C, MD Pulmonology, Consultant Pulmonologist at Vagus Hospital, Bengaluru
The Melbourne data pointed to one prevention gap above all others: most patients who ended up in hospital had inhalers at home they had not touched in months. They felt fine, until the storm proved otherwise.
"Every patient with allergic rhinitis should be informed that hay fever can involve the lower airways and may increase the risk of asthma, especially during monsoon thunderstorms," says Dr. Aishwarya C, Consultant Pulmonologist, Vagus Hospital, Bengaluru. "Simple anticipatory counselling can significantly reduce severe respiratory exacerbations."
Before monsoon season, Dr. Aishwarya advises primary physicians to counsel patients on the following:
Avoid outdoor exposure during thunderstorms and high-wind periods
Keep windows closed during storms
Recognise the warning symptoms, wheeze, chest tightness, breathlessness
Use prescribed allergy medications regularly, not only during flares
Undergo asthma screening or spirometry if symptomatic
Start preventive inhaler therapy in high-risk individuals when indicated
If symptoms start:
Use your reliever inhaler immediately and sit upright, do not lie down. Symptoms typically ease within 15–20 minutes. If they do not improve after a second dose, that is the moment to call for help, not wait another round.
Seek emergency care without delay if you cannot speak in full sentences, if lips appear blue, or if repeated inhaler doses bring no relief. In an emergency, it is safe to use another person's reliever inhaler if you do not have your own.
Call 112 or go directly to the nearest emergency department. Do not wait for symptoms to settle on their own.
Thunderstorm asthma does not require a new diagnosis or a new prescription to prevent. It requires a plan.
The patients who ended up in Melbourne's emergency departments that night were not caught without access to medicine, many had inhalers at home, unused, because they felt well enough not to need them. The storm found them outside, mid-pollen season, without a plan.
Pre-monsoon India has the same meteorological conditions, the same pollen loads, and a far larger population of people with untreated allergic disease.
Chest tightness, wheezing, shortness of breath, and persistent cough, onset is sudden, during or just before a thunderstorm in pollen season. The key warning sign is rapid worsening. If symptoms escalate faster than a typical hay fever flare, use a reliever inhaler immediately.
Use your reliever inhaler (salbutamol/bronchodilator) immediately and sit upright. Symptoms should ease within 15–20 minutes. If they do not improve after two rounds, seek emergency care. In India, call 112 or go to the nearest emergency department. Antihistamines will not help.
Yes. Research from the Melbourne 2016 event found that 60% of hospital admissions had no prior asthma diagnosis. Seasonal hay fever, specifically grass pollen sensitisation, was the shared risk factor. A thunderstorm can convert a hay fever patient into an acute asthma case within minutes.
April to June across Peninsular India, when pre-monsoon convective storms overlap with rising grass pollen loads. Cities on the Deccan plateau, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune, Nagpur, Chennai are particularly exposed.
With prompt reliever inhaler use, symptoms typically ease within 15–20 minutes. If they persist or worsen after repeated doses, emergency care is required immediately.
No. Antihistamines do not reverse bronchospasm. Only a bronchodilator reliever inhaler (e.g., salbutamol) addresses the airway emergency. Antihistamines can be used for routine hay fever control but are not emergency treatment.
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