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View Full Version : Nonsurgical acid reflux therapies work: U.S. study



Islander
01-21-09, 11:41 AM
Mon Jan 19, 2009

By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Two nonsurgical procedures relieve many symptoms of acid reflux disease including heartburn in people who are not helped by the medications typically used to treat it, U.S. researchers said on Friday.
In this chronic condition, also called gastroesophageal reflux disease, or GERD, stomach acid backs up into the esophagus, irritating its lining and causing inflammation. Persistent, often-severe heartburn is the most common symptom.
Most people are helped if they take a class of drugs called proton pump inhibitors such as AstraZeneca Plc's Nexium and Prilosec, Wyeth's Protonix, Takeda Pharmaceutical Co's Prevacid and Eisai Inc's Aciphex.
For those who are not helped by medications, there are few options short of surgery.
The new study, published in the journal Archives of Surgery, found two rarely performed so-called endoluminal therapies reduced heartburn, swallowing difficulties and voice hoarseness in many patients who underwent them.
Both are done using an endoscope, a long flexible instrument inserted through the mouth and down the esophagus.
One procedure called full-thickness plication uses the endoscope to tighten the junction between the esophagus and the stomach with sutures. The other, called radiofrequency therapy, uses heat to improve the function of the valve between the esophagus and stomach.
In this study, 68 patients underwent radiofrequency treatment and 58 had full-thickness plication.
"I think medication is still the first thing that people should try for reflux," Dr. Louis Jeansonne IV of Ochsner Medical Center, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, one of the researchers, said in a telephone interview.
"Surgery is still the most effective treatment in people who don't have relief with medications. But this study shows that this therapy without surgery is a viable option in patients who either can't have surgery or don't want surgery," Jeansonne added.
Surgery used to treat acid reflux is called laparoscopic fundoplication, in which doctors take the top of the stomach and wrap it around the lower part of the esophagus to create a barrier for acid reflux.
Acid reflux returns more than 80 percent of the time when people stop taking the medications.
"It's nice to be able to offer something less invasive," said Dr. Edward Lin of Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, another of the researchers.
Lin noted the two nonsurgical treatments are uncommon in part because health insurance companies typically do not pay for them. Lin added that these nonsurgical treatments do not preclude a patient from getting surgery later if they do not provide relief.
(Editing by Julie Steenhuysen and Todd Eastham)

Islander
01-21-09, 11:41 AM
Like RLS, I have trouble believing that GERD is not a made-up disease.

Reesacat
01-21-09, 05:50 PM
Often going gluten-free helps heartburn/indigestion.
It's easy and doesn't cost anything-try for a week or two and see how you feel.

mellowsong
01-22-09, 06:57 PM
I think being called diseases is asinine but both things are VERY real to sufferers. Unfortunately, they are symptoms of some other problem. For example, RLS is usually a mineral deficiency/electrolyte imbalance, but doc's don't prescribe calcium, magnesium and potassium...that's way to simple. For GERD, it is usually caused by LOW stomach acid. Instead of prescribing Apple Cider Vinegar before meals, they LOWER stomach acid further with H2 antagonists or proton pump inhibitors.

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Islander
01-22-09, 09:12 PM
Nice graphics, LOL!

Islander
01-29-09, 12:25 AM
Mellowsong, can you give me more detail on GERD and the apple cider vinegar Tx?

I'm meeting a new person Friday (thru freecycle) who has cardiac issues but also mentioned acid reflux. She is willing to listen to some alternative approaches. Would appreciate your picking your brain for me. Very rich pickin's there! Hand-pick me some low-hanging fruit, please!

mellowsong
01-29-09, 05:31 PM
Aww gee thanks Islander :) She can take one tablespoonful of ACV straight or 2 tablespoonsful in 8 oz of water just before eating. Most reflux is caused by low stomach acid, not high. Acid keeps the sphincter between the stomach and esophagus tight. When there isn't enough, the spinchter loosens and what acid there is refluxes back into the esophagus. ACV increases the acidity in the stomach, thus keeping the sphincter tight. Antacids work by making stomach acid so low, it doesn't burn anymore, but does nothing for the reflux itself. Long term use of H2 antagonists and proton pump inhibitors are now being linked to stomach and esophageal cancer, because although the acid doesn't burn the esophagus anymore, the contents of the stomach still reflux up and irritate the esophagus. Low stomach acid has long been known to be a factor in stomach cancer.

There are a bunch of expensive medical tests that can determine if too little or too much acid is the cause of reflux, but the easy way is the ACV. If it causes pain, then you already have too much acid. If you feel better, then you have too little acid. The same thing can be tried with the supplement betaine HCl (hydrochloric acid). Normally, you take the HCL just before meals. If one capsule hurts, then your problem is too much acid, not too little. Otherwise, you raise it one capsule at a time until you feel a bit of a "burn" then back down to where you felt no discomfort. I haven't needed to do this myself, so I can't describe the burn any better, this is just what I've heard on the GAPS list.

I will say that changing to a no processed foods diet cured my reflux in less than 2 months without knowing about ACV or betaine HCl.

Islander
01-29-09, 06:00 PM
Thank you, Mellowsong. I knew you'd have an answer!