Particulate ash exposure can indeed cause both short and long term lung injury. Short term airway irritation that is asthma like with cough and breathlessness is know to occur. Long term problems with bronchiectasis (injury and inflammation in the medium and smaller airways) and inflammatory lung lesions can also occur. It is worth at least wearing a mask and keeping indoor air filtered.
"It is worth at least wearing a mask and keeping indoor air filtered."
I agree with this statement. Just to give you an idea of what ash-smoke can do,
I have my own lung problems today stemming from just ONE night out on the beach
near a campfire and the smoke from the campfire became strong enough to when I was
too close to it and breathed in the smoke, I instantly, the next day had bronchitis for the
first time. From then on to this day, many years later, I now have developed lung scarring
that has made me unable to breathe at all unless I have medications and lung steroids,
and I must always get the flu shot each because ONE cold will send me to the hospital emergency room, no medications of my own helping me to breathe.
If I would've known a mask would have protected me from what I have NOW?
Absolutely, I would've worn a mask.....or not gone to the campfire at all. :)
Just one spore making it through to the lung will give lifetime lung problems.