Acid Reflux (GERD)




Has Your Doctor Ruled Out the Three Causes of Acid Reflux?

Ronald Grisanti D.C., D.A.B.C.O., M.S.

The term GERD (Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease) has been labeled nonulcer dyspepsia and acid reflux.

All acid reflux disease sufferers do not have the same symptoms, but many experience some or even all of the following:

    * Heartburn (the most common symptom, a rising, burning                 sensation in the chest)
    * Sour or bitter taste from regurgitation of stomach contents
    * Difficult or painful swallowing

It is important to realize that symptoms can overlap with a hiatel hernia and gallbladder disease.

These include a dull aching, uncomfortable fullness, or a feeling that everything you have eaten is sitting there and ballooning. Or you may experience burning or pain with or without nausea and vomiting.

Approximately one-third of the people in the US suffer from frequent heartburn with approximately 3 to 7 percent from acid reflux.

The conventional evaluation may include an esophagogastroduodenoscopy.

This test is helpful in determining:

   * the cause of upper GI (gastrointestinal) bleeding
   * the presence of ulcerations or inflammation
   * the cause of abdominal pain
   * the condition of the stomach and duodenum after an operation
   * the presence of tumors or other abnormalities of the upper GI tract      inflammation, narrowing, or tumors of the esophagus

Conventional Medical Treatment

The two classes of drug therapies generally prescribed to treat these disorders are H2 receptor antagonists and proton pump inhibitors H2 receptor antagonists reduce the amount of acid produced in the stomach.

Marketed as Zantac, Tagamet and Pepcid, they eliminate symptoms and allow healing of the esophagus in only about 50 percent of patients. And remission is maintained in only about 25 percent those patients.

More powerful and effective than the H2's are the proton pump inhibitors. Marketed as Prilosec, Prevacid, AcipHex and Protonix, they block stomach acids from splashing up into the esophagus.

This quickly resolves symptoms and allows healing of the esophagus in 80 percent to 90 percent of patients. These medications are effective while you take them, but once you discontinue their use, your problem often recurs.

Alternative Medical Treatment

As with many medications, the improvement experienced by the patient has it’s share of draw-backs.

The first being the long term side-effects one may experience.

Adverse effects of the drug cisapride, which was marketed as Propulsid, prompted Janssen Pharmaceutica to stop marketing Propulsid in the United States.

The question that an individual should be asking is...

“Why am I suffering with this problem?”

Doesn't that make sense?

Unfortunately, traditional medicine focuses on the symptomatic relief of a condition rather than investigate the reasons why the patient has the problem in the first place.

Food allergies are the most common cause of GERD and acid reflux.

It goes without saying that you should avoid known allergens that may be contributing or causing your condition.

Helicobacter pylori and candida infection have been linked as being a sole cause of this condition.

Some drugs have been linked to increase the potential of developing GERD: birth control pills, nicotine, provera & progesterone.

Stress may also be a primary factor.

My advice is to investigate the underlying factors that may be causing your problem. The following tests are recommended for a thorough evaluation of acid reflux/GERD.

    * Helicobacter pylori evaluation
    * Candida Infection evaluation
    * Food Allergies/Sensitivities

Dr. Grisanti's Comment
:

As the public is indoctrinated with advertisements offering "temporary relief" of acid reflux, heartburn and related upper GI health problems, it deeply concerns me that this problem will continue to escalate as one of the top 5 health problems of the century.

If you are one of millions of individuals suffering with acid reflux, I want to urge you to investigate the underlying factors that have led to your condition.

Continued use of many of the prescribed medications such as Prilosec, Prevacid etc. will only prolong your condition and open the door for more SERIOUS disease.
.   
The pure satisfaction to STOP the pain, can give way to more serious underlying conditions that are percolating below the surface.

Dr. Watkins’ Comment:

I will interject here and add a few comments in addition to Dr. Grisanti’s.  Those of you who have been patients of mine will have heard me explain this before.  The stomach’s job is to secrete hydrochloric acid so that it can digest the contents in the stomach, primarily protein (its also used as a defense mechanism in killing bacteria).  Let’s say you eat a nice, juicy steak.  When the meat your eating goes to the stomach, it sits in this dark, very warm environment.  Now, what happens when you leave a piece of meat in a hot, environment?  Well, it begins to rot.  This same things happens in your stomach if you do not have adequate levels of acid to digest it.  So now our steak is rotting our stomach.  As this process progresses, it starts to putrify giving off very acidic gases and substances.  Now we have a very acidic environment that occasionally gets up in our esophagus giving us that feeling of heart burn or reflux.
 
Although popping some antacids helps, the reason it helps is because it is neutralizing the acid that is being given off from the rotting meat.  Now we have rotting meat still in our stomach being very slowly digested, a lack of hydrochloric acid, and we’ve neutralized the acid even more with antacids (did you also know that drinking milk neutralizes this acid as well?).

With saying all of this, does taking ACID-BLOCKING drugs make sense?  Not at all, and usually we see patients get great relief when we supplement MORE acid, decrease foods causing sensitivities or allergies, as well as taking other necessary steps specific to each person.


References

      Rogers, Sherry, No More Heartburn, New York, NY; Kensington Publishing Corp., 2000; 131-133

      Lipski, Elizabeth, Digestive Wellness, Lincolnwood, Illinois; Keats Publishing, 2000: 205-209

      Golan, Ralph, Optimal Wellness, New York, NY; Random House, 1995: 373-374

      Nichols, Trent, Optimal Digestion, New York, NY; Avon Books, 1999: 579-584