

You have been using an inhaler for months. But the breathing problems are not going away. In fact, they are slowly getting worse. Your doctor has changed your medicine twice. Nothing is working.
What if the problem is not your lungs at all?
For many patients, the real problem is the windpipe — a tube in your throat that carries air in and out of your lungs. When this tube gets narrow or blocked, breathing becomes difficult. And because the symptoms look just like asthma, the real cause is often missed for months.
Studies have found that nearly half of all patients with a narrowed windpipe are first told they have asthma — and given inhalers that do not help at all. Meanwhile, the windpipe keeps getting narrower.
This post will explain what the windpipe does, what signs to watch for, and when it is time to stop managing symptoms and get a proper specialist opinion. Very few surgeons in Mumbai perform windpipe surgery — Dr. George Karimundackal and his team at Nanavati Max Super Speciality Hospital are among the most experienced specialists available for tracheal surgery in Mumbai.
You should see a thoracic surgeon when your doctor suspects a problem inside the chest cavity that might need surgery and this includes conditions affecting the lungs food pipe windpipe chest wall or the mediastinum. Common reasons for referral include suspected lung cancer esophageal cancer persistent chest pain that cardiology has cleared chronic breathing problems linked to structural issues non-cancerous lung diseases like bronchiectasis and severe acid reflux or GERD that medicines can no longer control
According to Dr. George Karimundackal, Lung Cancer Specialist in Mumbai and Director of Thoracic Surgery at Nanavati Max Super Speciality Hospital Patients referred early to a thoracic surgeon have better surgical outcomes because the disease is caught before it becomes complex
The windpipe — doctors call it the trachea — is a tube about 10 to 12 centimetres long. It sits in your throat and chest, connecting your voice box to your lungs. Every single breath you take passes through it. When it is healthy and open, you never notice it. When it starts to narrow, breathing becomes work.
The most common problem is called tracheal stenosis, which simply means the windpipe has become too narrow. This can happen for several reasons:
● After being on a breathing machine, when a breathing tube is placed in the windpipe during surgery or an ICU stay, it can cause scarring as it heals. That scar tissue slowly narrows the windpipe over weeks or months.
● After a tracheostomy, a small opening made in the throat for a breathing tube can also cause scar tissue to form.
● A growth or tumour in or around the windpipe that presses on it from inside or outside.
● An injury to the throat or chest area.
The most important thing to know: by the time symptoms appear, the windpipe has often already narrowed to less than one-third of its normal size.
This sound — doctors call it stridor — is one of the clearest warning signs. It is a harsh, squeaky, or whistling noise that you can hear when someone breathes in. It is different from the wheezing sound of asthma, which usually happens when breathing out. If someone in your family is making this sound while breathing, do not wait. Get it checked right away.
This is the warning sign that gets missed most often. Inhalers work by relaxing the small airways in the lungs. But if the problem is in the windpipe — not the lungs — inhalers will do nothing. So if you or a family member has been using an inhaler for weeks or months and the breathing is still not improving, this is an important sign. The problem may be in the windpipe, not the lungs. Ask your doctor to check.
If a new dry cough started after a surgery, an ICU admission, or any time someone was on a breathing machine — and that cough has not gone away — the windpipe may have been affected. This kind of cough does not produce much phlegm. It just stays there, week after week. This is worth reporting to your doctor, especially if it came on after a hospital stay.
Some patients describe it as a feeling that air cannot move freely. Like something is in the way. It may feel like tightness in the throat or upper chest. This feeling tends to come on slowly, so many people ignore it at first — or blame it on stress, weight gain, or getting older. But if this feeling has been there for several weeks and is slowly getting worse, it needs proper attention.
Some patients describe it as a feeling that air cannot move freely. Like something is in the way. It may feel like tightness in the throat or upper chest. This feeling tends to come on slowly, so many people ignore it at first — or blame it on stress, weight gain, or getting older. But if this feeling has been there for several weeks and is slowly getting worse, it needs proper attention.
If your voice has become hoarse, sounds different, or tires out quickly when speaking — and this has been going on for more than two to three weeks with no clear reason — it may be connected to a problem in the windpipe or voice box. When this happens alongside any breathing problems, it is a strong sign to see a specialist.
If your breathing symptoms are getting worse despite treatment, it may be time to check your windpipe. Schedule a consultation with a specialist.
Both asthma and a narrowed windpipe cause breathlessness and a wheeze. Both get worse with physical activity. Without special tests, a doctor examining you in a clinic may not be able to tell the difference just from listening to your chest. A regular chest X-ray usually does not show windpipe narrowing either. This is why so many patients are treated for asthma for months — sometimes over a year — before anyone checks the windpipe. The only real clue early on is that the inhalers are not working.
This is something many patients and families do not know: anyone who has spent time on a ventilator — a breathing machine — is at higher risk of developing windpipe narrowing in the weeks and months after they come home. This includes people who were on a ventilator because of a bad road accident, major surgery, COVID-19, or any serious illness. Even a short stay on a ventilator can cause the windpipe wall to become damaged. As it heals, scar tissue forms. That scar tissue slowly makes the windpipe narrower. Symptoms often do not appear until several weeks after coming home from hospital — by which time the patient and their family may have no idea the windpipe is the problem. If someone in your family was on a breathing machine at any point in the past year and now has breathing difficulties, tell your doctor. Ask them to check the windpipe specifically.
Still Struggling to Breathe Despite Asthma Treatment?
If inhalers are not improving your breathing, the problem may not be in the lungs. A detailed evaluation of the windpipe can help identify the real cause.
Book a consultation with Dr. George Karimundackal, to get an accurate diagnosis and the right treatment plan.
It is a complex surgery — but it is not the same as open heart surgery. It requires a surgeon who has specific training and experience in windpipe operations, because the windpipe is a delicate structure. Dr. George and his team at Nanavati Max perform these procedures using the most advanced techniques available, including robotic thoracic surgery in Mumbai for appropriate cases, which uses small cuts instead of a large open incision — meaning less pain and faster recovery for most patients. If you are interested in how these minimally invasive techniques compare, the VATS vs RATS comparison explains the differences in simple terms.
In most cases, no. A narrowed windpipe caused by scar tissue will not open up on its own. There are non-surgical options — such as stretching the windpipe open using a small balloon (called dilation) — but these are usually temporary. The narrowing often comes back. For patients with a significant windpipe narrowing that is causing breathing problems, surgery to remove the narrow section and reconnect the healthy parts of the windpipe is usually the most lasting solution.
The simplest way to explain the difference: asthma improves with an inhaler. A narrowed windpipe does not. Asthma is caused by the small airways in the lungs tightening up — and inhalers can relax them. A narrowed windpipe is a physical, structural problem — like a garden hose that has been crimped. No inhaler can open it up. The other key difference is where you hear the breathing sound. In asthma, the wheeze is usually heard when breathing out. In a narrowed windpipe, the noisy breathing is louder when breathing in.
See a thoracic specialist in Mumbai if any of the following apply:
A general doctor may not encounter windpipe conditions often. A thoracic specialist can run the right tests — a CT scan and a camera test called bronchoscopy — to see exactly what is happening inside the windpipe and recommend the correct treatment.
The windpipe is something most people never think about. But when it starts to narrow, it affects every single breath — and the warning signs are easy to confuse with asthma or a chest infection.
The most important thing to remember is this: if breathing problems are not getting better with normal treatment, or if someone has had a recent hospital stay or been on a breathing machine — the windpipe needs to be checked.
Getting the right diagnosis early makes a real difference. The more the windpipe narrows before treatment starts, the harder the surgery becomes. If something does not feel right with your breathing, do not keep waiting for the inhalers to work. Ask for a scan. Ask to see a specialist.
For a proper evaluation from a thoracic surgeon in Mumbai with specific experience in windpipe conditions, a clinical consultation is the right first step.
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