“…18,44,45 This may be a result of the presence of a more neutrophilic than eosinophilic airway inflammation in the athlete. [46][47][48][49] Criteria for good asthma control include no or minimal daytime symptoms, no limitations of activity, no nocturnal symptoms, no or minimal need for rescue medication, normal lung function, and no or mild infrequent exacerbations. Difficult-to-control asthma may be a result of an inadequate diagnosis, undertreatment (usually from underestimation of severity), poor adherence to the treatment, exacerbating factors such as allergen or pollutant exposures, or comorbidities, or a more severe phenotype of asthma that is less responsive to therapy.…”