Acid reflux isn’t pleasant. Symptoms of acid reflux include heartburn (a painful burning sensation in your abdomen, chest, or throat), regurgitation (acid backing up into your throat or mouth), and dyspepsia (burping, nausea, bloating, and abdominal pain/discomfort). If acid reflux occurs frequently and chronically, you may be diagnosed with gastroesophageal reflux disease, or GERD, which is a chronic digestive disease.
He Drank His Way To A Nobel Prize
Dr Barry Marshall an internist and Dr Robin Warren a pathologist at Royal Perth Hospital both suffered from seeing patients with severe acid reflux disease. Some patients had their stomachs removed or bled until they died. In 1981 they began working together to find a cure for GERD and ulcers. Dr Warren had discovered that the patients gut were filled with bacteria shaped like cork screws.
7 Tips for Dealing With Baby Reflux
No parent likes to see their baby uncomfortable or in pain, and baby reflux can be a frustrating and tearful experience for mother and baby alike. Just like in adults, acid reflex in babies occurs when the lower esophageal sphincter, which controls the flow of food between the stomach and the esophagus, doesn’t work correctly. This allows stomach content and acid to back up into the esophagus. Baby reflux symptoms include frequent “spitting up,” difficulty eating, and heartburn and gas during or shortly after eating. Continue reading here>
The 10 Funniest Tweets About Reflux
For those of you who don’t know, acid reflux affects millions of people around the world every day. There is no single demographic to sum up this group because reflux can affect all age groups. Reflux occurs when the valve called the Lower Esophageal Sphincter functions improperly. Continue Reading Article >
3 Strange Symptoms of Reflux and How To Overcome Them
We all know the symptoms that come along acid reflux. There’s the bloating, heartburn, and stomach cramps that always follow your favorite meal, but there are also symptoms you could be experiencing that are less common among people suffering from reflux. However, people who suffer from acid reflux may come across these unique symptoms and there are most certainly ways to battle the symptoms when they arise. Here's the top three rare symptoms of reflux and how to combat them. Continue Reading Article >
6 Common Symptoms of Acid Reflux
What is acid reflux? Acid reflux is the accumulation of symptoms caused from indigestion, gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), and heartburn. Where the esophagus meets the stomach there is a valve called the lower esophageal sphincter (LES), when operating correctly this valve is responsible for allowing food into the stomach, then stopping it from returning to the esophagus. This doesn't sound pretty, and it definitely doesn't feel great. Here's a list of symptoms that are tell tale signs that you have acid reflux. Continue Reading Article >
Reflux: When Should Surgery Become an Option?
Surgery for acid reflux disease is only used when lifestyle changes and medications don’t work. Over the last several years traditional surgery has been replaced with minimally invasive procedures. This means that often surgery is done on an outpatient basis and recovery time is quicker and less painful. Surgery is often recommended when you have serious GERD symptoms. The doctor will often recommend acid reflux surgery when you have ulcers and scar tissue on the esophagus and stomach. Continue Reading Article >
American Reflux: It's On The Rise
Acid reflux is becoming a huge global issue. It’s been on the rise for decades, and it’s worse than ever before, particularly in the US. It’s estimated that over 20% to 30% of Americans suffer from acid reflux at least once weekly, according to the National Digestive Disease Information Clearinghouse. Hospitalization from acid reflux and GERD also increased in 2015 to 3,141,965 people. GERD diagnoses for infants continue to rise, increasing 42% for infants and 84% for children ages 2-17 in 2015, according to the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project.
Anyone can develop the more serious form of reflux called GERD. It occurs in young and old and among different races. Most of the hospital discharges of GERD were women according to Healthcare and Utilization Project.
Reflux is caused by acid splashing back up into the esophagus, usually after a meal. It can be caused by a number of things, but generally it’s seen in people who have a weakened lower esophageal sphincter. When the LES is weak it isn’t able to close properly, which allows stomach acid to splash back up into the esophagus and results in reflux. The symptoms of reflux are heartburn, sour taste in the mouth and throat, vomiting, chronic cough, and breathing difficulty, so you can see why people don’t exactly love it.
Doctors are still not sure exactly what causes the lower esophageal sphincter to weaken, or why rates of reflux are so high in the United States. In some people it may be genetic, and in many cases there are a number of other lifestyle factors that may contribute. Overeating, being overweight, pregnancy, wearing tight clothing, and smoking are just a few. They’ve got a few more suspicions about what might be contributing to the rise of reflux in the US.
Causes and Factors That Increase the Risk of Reflux and GERD
Many doctors believe excessive weight is a big contributor to reflux. There is a rise in overweight children and adults in the US. Excessive weight puts pressure on the stomach and often puts on fat around the organs in the body. When you eat fat this slows down the digestive process, leaving more food to cause reflux.
Another culprit? Food. We have a large selection of food in the supermarkets and restaurants in the United States, and many of these foods increase stomach acid, which causes reflux. Beverages like coffee, tea, and soda have large amounts of caffeine that is acidic. Coffee and other caffeinated beverages also interfere with the natural ability of the esophagus to move food into the stomach, backing things up and potentially causing heartburn or reflux. Fatty food also slow down the passage of food from the stomach into the intestines. In fact, you will find reflux to be worse after large meals.
In addition to food, other American lifestyle habits can cause reflux. Smoking often leads to belching and swallowing air that worsens the symptoms of reflux and GERD. Too much alcohol (yes, there is such a thing!) produces excessive stomach acid and affects how the esophagus functions. Pregnancy, with all those crazy hormonal changes, drastically increases the symptoms of GERD.
So What Can We Do?
Dr. Kevin McGrath, an Associate Professor of Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, says that part of the problem might be that some people have sensitive nerve ending and they feel the acid more than others. He believes stress is another factor. He thinks taking anti-depressants to relieve anxiety and to desensitize the nerve fibers may help alleviate reflux and GERD.
Dr. McGrath tells patients to eat several small meals a day. Meals should be low-fat, because fat slows down the digestion of food. Dr. Ronnie Fass, a member on the Advisory Board for the International Foundation for Gastrointestinal Disorders, says many people believe heartburn is part of the eating experience, which is frankly just incorrect. It’s not normal to experience heartburn after you eat. Heartburn is a sign that something is very wrong with your digestive process, and can be an indicator of GERD.
Overeating, obesity, and a poor diet are some of the main causes of GERD in the United States. Many of the processed foods we eat contain citric acid and ascorbic acid used to preserve food. When we eat these foods, we expose our body to more acid. Look at labels and cut down on canned and processed food with these two ingredients.
Lifestyle changes and diet can help with reflux symptoms. When symptoms persist, seeing a doctor for GERD will help find a solution. There are many medications that help with GERD and treatments that are effective in ending the symptoms.
Written by: Joan Russell