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How Your Antacid Drug Is Making You Sick (Part B)

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Note: this is the fifth article in a series about heartburn and GERD. If you haven’t done so already, you’ll want to read Part I, Part II, Part III, and Part IVa before reading this article.

In the last article, we discussed the first two of four primary consequences of taking acid stopping drugs:

  1. Bacterial overgrowth
  2. Impaired nutrient absorption

In this article we’ll cover the remaining two consequences:

  1. Decreased resistance to infection
  2. Increased risk of cancer and other diseases
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Our First Line of Defense

The mouth, esophagus and intestines are home to between 400-1,000 species of bacteria. However, a healthy stomach is normally almost completely sterile. Why? Because stomach acid kills bacteria.

In fact, that’s one of it’s most important roles: to provide a two-way barrier that protects the stomach from pathogenic bacteria.

First, stomach acid prevents harmful bacteria that may be present in the food or liquid we consume or the air we breathe from entering the intestine. At the same time, stomach acid also prevents normal bacteria from the intestines to move into the stomach and esophagus, where they could cause problems.

The low pH (high acid) environment of the stomach is one of the major non-specific defense mechanisms of the body. When the pH of the stomach is 3 or lower, the normal between-meal “resting” level, bacteria don’t last more than fifteen minutes. But as the pH rises to 5 or more, many bacterial species can avoid the acid treatment and begin to thrive.

Unfortunately, this is exactly what happens when you take acid stopping drugs. Both Tagamet and Zantac significantly raise the pH of the stomach from about 1 to 2 before treatment to 5.5 to 6.5 after, respectively.

Prilosec and other PPIs are even worse. Just one of these pills is capable of reducing stomach acid secretion by 90 to 95 percent for the better part of a day. Taking higher or more frequent doses of PPIs, as is often recommended, produces a state of achlorydia (virtually no stomach acid). In a study of ten healthy men aged 22 to 55 years, a 20 or 40 mg dose of Prilosec reduced stomach acid levels to near-zero.

A stomach without much acid is in many ways a perfect environment to harbor pathogenic bacteria. It’s dark, warm, moist, and full of nutrients.

Most of the time these bacteria won’t kill us – at least not right away. But some of them can. People who have a gastric pH high enough to promote bacterial overgrowth are more vulnerable to serious bacterial infections.

A recent systematic review of gastric acid-suppressive drugs suggested that they do in fact increase susceptibility to infections (PDF). The author found evidence that using acid stopping drugs can increase your chances of contracting the following nasty bugs:

  • Salmonella
  • Campylobacter
  • Cholera
  • Listeria
  • Giardia
  • C. Difficile

Other studies have found that acid stopping drugs also increase the risk for:

Not only do acid stopping drugs increase our susceptibility to infection, they weaken our immune system’s ability to fight off infections once we have them. In vitro studies have shown that PPIs impair nuetrophil function, decrease adhesion to endothelial cells, reduce bactericidal killing of microbes, and inhibit neutrophil phagocytosis and phagolysosome acidification.

A Gateway to Other Serious Diseases

As we discussed in the first article in this series, a decline in acid secretion with age has been well documented. As recently as 1996, a British physician noted that age-related stomach acid decline is due to a loss of the cells that produce the acid. This condition is called atrophic gastritis.

In particular relevance to our discussion here, atrophic gastritis (a condition where stomach acid is very low) is associated with a wide range of serious disorders that go far beyond the stomach and esophagus. These include:

  • Stomach cancer
  • Allergies
  • Bronchial asthma
  • Depression, anxiety, mood disorders
  • Pernicious anemia
  • Skin diseases, including forms of acne, dermatitis, eczema, and urticaria
  • Gall bladder disease (gallstones)
  • Autoimmune diseases, such as Rheumatoid arthritis and Graves disease
  • Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), Crohn’s disease (CD), Ulcerative colitis (UC)
  • Chronic hepatitis
  • Osteoporosis
  • Type 1 diabetes

And let’s not forget that low stomach acid can cause heartburn and GERD!

In the interest of keeping this article from becoming a book, I’m going to focus on just a few of the disorders on the list above.

Stomach Cancer

Atrophic gastritis is a major risk factor for stomach cancer. H. pylori is the leading cause of atrophic gastritis. Acid suppressing drugs worsen H. pylori infections and increase rates of infection.

Therefore, it’s not a huge leap to suspect that acid suppressing drugs increase the risk of stomach cancer in those infected with H. pylori (which, as we saw in Part III, is one in two people).

In a recent editorial, Julie Parsonnet, M.D. of Standford University Medical School writes:

In principle, current [acid suppressing drug] therapies might be advancing the cancer clock by converting relatively benign gastric inflammation into a more destructive, premalignant process.

One way PPIs increase the risk of cancer is by inducing hypergastrinemia, a condition of above-normal secretion of the hormone gastrin. This is a potentially serious condition that has been linked to adenocarcinoma – a form of stomach cancer.

Taking a standard 20 mg daily dose of Prilosec typically results in up to a three-to-fourfold increase in gastrin levels. In people whose heartburn fails to respond to the standard dose, long-term treatment with doses as high as 40 or 60 mg has produced gastrin levels as much as tenfold above normal.

Another theory of what causes stomach cancer involves elevated concentration of nitrites in the gastric fluid.

In a healthy stomach, ascorbic acid (vitamin C) removes nitrite from gastric juice by converting it to nitric oxide. However, this process is dependent upon the pH of the stomach being less than 4. As I discussed earlier in this article, most common acid stopping medications have no trouble increasing the pH of the stomach to 6 or even higher.

Therefore, it’s entirely plausible that acid stopping medications increase the risk of stomach cancer by at least two distinct mechanisms.

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Gastric and Duodenal Ulcers

An estimated 90% of duodenal (intestinal) and 65% of gastric ulcers are caused by H. pylori. It is also recognized that the initial H. pylori infection probably only takes place when the acidity of the stomach is decreased. In a human inoculation experiment, infection could not be established unless the pH of the stomach was raised (thus lowering the acidity) by use of histamine antagonists.

By lowering stomach acid and increasing stomach pH, acid suppressing drugs increase the risk of H. pylori infection and subsequent development of duodenal or gastric ulcers.

Irritable Bowel Syndrome, Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis

Adenosine is a key mediator of inflammation in the digestive tract, and high extracellular levels of adenosine suppress and resolve chronic inflammation in both Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. Chronic use of PPIs has been shown to decrease extracellular concentration of adenosine, resulting in an increase in inflammation in the digestive tract. Therefore, it is possible that long-term use of acid stopping medications may predispose people to developing serious inflammatory bowel disorders.

It has become increasingly well established that irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is caused at least in part by small bowel bacterial overgrowth (SIBO). It is also well known that acid suppressing drugs contribute to bacterial overgrowth, as I explained in Part II and Part III. It makes perfect sense, then, that chronic use of acid suppressing drugs could contribute to the development of IBS in those that didn’t previously have it, and worsen the condition in those already affected.

Depression, Anxiety and Mood Disorders

While there is no specific research (that I am aware of) linking acid suppressing drugs to depression or mood disorders, a basic understanding of the relationship between protein digestion and mental health suggests that there may be a connection.

During the ingestion of food stomach acid secretion triggers the release of pepsin. Pepsin is the enzyme responsible for breaking down protein into its component amino acids and peptides (two or more linked amino acids). Essential amino acids are called “essential” because we cannot manufacture them in our bodies. We must get them from food.

If pepsin is deficient, the proteins we eat won’t be broken down into these essential amino acid and peptide components. Since many of these essential amino acids, such as phenylalanine and tryptophan, play a crucial role in mental and behavioral health, low stomach acid may predispose people towards developing depression, anxiety or mood disorders.

Autoimmune Diseases

Low stomach acid and consequent bacterial overgrowth cause the intestine to become permeable, allowing undigested proteins to find their way into the bloodstream. This condition is often referred to as “leaky gut syndrome”. Salzman and colleagues have shown that both transcellular and paracellular intestinal permeability are substantially increased in atrophic gastritis sufferers compared to control patients.

When undigested proteins end up in the bloodstream, they are considered as “foreign” by the immune system. The resulting immune response is similar to what happens when the body mobilizes its defenses (i.e. T cells, B cells and antibodies) to eradicate a viral or bacterial infection.

This type of immune response against proteins we eat contributes to food allergies. A similar mechanism that is not fully understood predisposes people with a leaky gut to develop more serious autoimmune disorders such as lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, type 1 diabetes, Graves disease, and inflammatory bowel disorders like Crohn’s and ulcerative colitis.

The connection between rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and low stomach acid in particular has been well established in the literature. Examining the stomach contents of 45 RA patients, Swedish researchers found that 16 (36 percent) had virtually no stomach acid. Those people who had suffered from RA the longest had the least acid. A group of Italian researchers also found that people with RA have an extremely high rate of atrophic gastritis associated with low stomach acid when compared with normal individuals.

Asthma

In the last ten years, more than four hundred scientific articles concerned with the connection between asthma and gastric acidity have been published. One of the most common features of asthma, in addition to wheezing, is gastroesophageal reflux.

It is estimated that between up to 80 percent of people with asthma also have GERD. Compared with healthy people, those with asthma also have significantly more reflux episodes and more acid-induced irritation of their esophageal lining.

When acid gets into the windpipe, there is a tenfold drop in the ability of the lungs to take in and breathe out air. Physicians who are aware of this association have begun prescribing acid stopping drugs to asthma patients suffering from GERD. While these drugs may provide temporary symptomatic relief, they do not address the underlying cause of the LES dysfunction that permitted acid into the esophagus in the first place.

In fact, there is every reason to believe that acid suppressing drugs make the underlying problem (too little stomach acid and overgrowth of bacteria) worse, thus perpetuating and exacerbating the condition.

Conclusion

As we have seen in the previous articles in the series, heartburn and GERD are caused by too little – and not too much – stomach acid. Unfortunately, insufficient stomach acid is also associated with bacterial overgrowth, impaired nutrient absorption, decreased resistance to infection, and increased risk of stomach cancer, ulcers, IBS and other digestive disorders, depression and mood disorders, autoimmune disease, and asthma.

Chronic use of acid stopping medication dramatically reduces stomach acid, thus increasing the risk of all of these conditions. What’s more, acid suppressing medications not only do not address the underlying cause of heartburn and GERD, they make it worse.

Is the temporary symptom relief these drugs provide worth the risk? That’s something only you can decide. I hope the information I’ve provided here can help you make an educated decision.

In the next and final article of the series, I will present a plan for getting rid of heartburn and GERD once and for all without drugs.

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354 Comments

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  1. i have low/none acid in my stomach due to using 40mg dosage omeprazole i was told it was protecting my stomach. i was on 20mg but the dosage was raised 2/3 months ago and now keep suffering stomach bugs. i have now been told these have not protected me but have made me lose my stomach acid. how can i raise this back up again please as i now suffer with diahorria and can’t eat hardly anything. please help .

  2. I think the link between the acid-reducing drugs and the mood changes again point to gut health. The gut is where chemicals like dopamine and seratonin are produced. There is a definite gut-brain connection. If the gut flora gets out of balance, then it won’t be working properly and that will affect the chemical production which will in turn affect mood, sleep, attention span, learning ability, etc. The key is gut health! That means no antibiotics unless absolutely necessary, and healing the gut with probiotics and fermented foods.

  3. dear chris
    hope you can find time to reply. i live in the uk and have just found your blogs and find them very interesting. i am at my whits end with stomach problems. back in 2011 started with right side pain which went undiagnosed by my gp and hospital, i was put on 3 types of ppis increasing the dosage monthly to two a day i lost 3 stone in weight was off work for months. the first hospital diagnosed gastritis and diverticular disease, it wasn,t till april 2012 i collapsed at home with severe stomach pain i had the presence of mind to request the ambulance staff to takeme to another hospital where i was diagnosed as having a chronically inflamed gallbladder which had stones and sludge, at this point i couldn,t open my bowels and if i did the stols were clay coloured. since having the gallbladder removed i was putting on weight and feeling good, i had ever follow up test to check foe any remaining stones or sludge and everything normal, had lactulose hydrogen breath test and 24ph monitoring with swallow test all coming back normal.. until the first week in jan 13 when i have been experiencing acute pain under the sternum, vomiting and continuous nausea, i have a permanent foul taste continuously inmy mouth, all i can describe it as the taste you experience when licking an envelope, which is worse when i eat, my lips areburning and i also have a slimy feling in the mouth, with continuous air escaping from my throat which somtimes results in a belch. i was referred once again to the gastroenterologist, who has said i have non ulcer dyspepsia and prescribed 10mg of norotyptalyine. is this something i have to live with for the rest of my life as it is debilitating. i am awaiting hpylori test and was also checked for pancreas problems, a small incidental cyst found which was found to be benign and the hospital consider it not to be causing the problems. do you think i may have low stomach acid, just had some food and that slimyness has come back with the horrible taste. please advise if you can.
    l first

  4. Hi, I found this series of articles very interesting. But my issue is that I didn’t develop nightly indigestion (it wakes me up in the middle of the night) until I had been on a paleo/primal diet for three months. That said, do you suggest asking my MD to test for H. pylori or taking HCL? Thanks!

  5. After taking Prevacid for 7 years how can I safely stop it. I have tried several times in the past but rebound effect was so bad I ended up in the ER.

    • Try taking apple cider vinegar pills for a couple of weeks. Then reduce the Prevacid and see how you feel. Reduce the dosage slowly. If you can, 75% dose, then 50% dose, then 25% dose, then 0% dose. I’m not a doctor but this has helped myself and others.

  6. Dr. Kessler,

    I have read there is a simple way to determine whether you have too little or too much stomach acid. Try sipping a small amount of lemon juice, if this helps to rid one of heartburn then you have too little stomach acid but if the lemon juice makes your heartburn worse then you have too much stomach acid. I have done this myself and the lemon juice makes my heartburn MUCH worse! Apple cider vinegar also makes my symptoms worse.

    Can you give me any advice or thoughts……………..it would be greatly appreciated!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Thanks, Todd T.

  7. Hi Chris ,

    I’m not sure if you’ll have the time to reply to this message but I’ve been reading your articles for quite a while now and I’m in a tricky situation and would appreciate any advice you may be able to share.

    I’m a 20 year old male who has been diagnosed with H pylori and a stomach ulcer. On top of the burning from the stomach ulcer , daily acid reflux and heartburn I’ve also ended up 2 stone underweight , lacking multiple vitamins ( including b12 ) , have acne which wasn’t there before , multiple food allergies and daily joint pain.

    I’m guessing the symptoms that aren’t from the ulcer are caused by low stomach acid. This makes sense also because I was on PPI’s and antibiotics for many years before I became ill for an unrelated prostate problem. The antibiotics most likely killed off most of my friendly gut flora whilst the PPI’s lowered my stomach acid , both of these things made me susceptible to H pylori and it ended up taking a hold and of course as you’ve mentioned this too will cause low stomach acid.

    My problem with treating myself lies within the fact that I can’t do anything to raise my stomach acid because I’m suffering from the ulcers. I’ve tried HCL capsules but because of the ulcer and probable gastritis being caused by the H pylori it causes me terrible pain.

    I’m terrified of starting any antibiotics to combat the H pylori since I’ve read they can be practically useless and it was antibiotics in part that put me in this situation in the first place.

    Any ideas on something I could do ?.
    Thanks in advance.

  8. S. Beem, take another look–it’s not an ad. “Heartburn” is crossed out with “health.” It’s a joke that goes with the article. Take another look.

    Chris, I have suffered from laryngopharyngeal reflux for a while, but didn’t see anything about it mentioned in the series. It’s different than GERD in that the acid comes up into the throat, and the symptoms are very different (sensation of lump in the throat, post-nasal drip, etc.). Would you recommend the same protocol for it, or would you treat it differently? I’m interested in trying HCL supplements after reading all of this, but nervous if it will make it worse.

    • Chris – I am also interested to the answer to this question that Emily has posed. I also think I have the “Silent” reflux as I have the same lump in the throat symptoms and lots of post nasal drip. I’m curious to hear what your recommendations are for this.

      I had an episode last year (weeks of the lump in the throat feeling) and I did the very low carb diet (under 30g a day) for about a week and since then I have been symptom free. Well, up until a few weeks back, the lump has returned. 🙁 I think it’s because my “plant-based” vegetarian diet is pretty high carb and maybe I have low stomach acid? I also know that I do not chew my food very well – so I’ve started working on that – hoping it will give me some relief.

      Thanks again for the great blog.

      • I have the same question regarding laryngopharyngeal reflux and a hiatal hernia. Do you treat it the same way as GERD? I have not been taking any PPIs. I have been on a Paleo diet for 2 years and drink kombucha, eat sauerkraut almost every day. I do have occassional lapses with a cookie or two. Thanks.

  9. I just finshed reading “How your antacid drug is making you sick (part B)”. The gist of all the articles in the series being about how PPI’s cause, GERD/acid reflux and don’t cure it. Just to the right in the body of the article is an advertisment for Prilosec!!!! What in the eff is up with that?! Am I mistaken in my belief that these companies need your permission to advertise on your site? If so, then I apologize, but if I am not, shame on you!

    • Ha! I see this a lot on many sites. The site owner doesn’t control the ads. Google (or whoever places them) automatically places them wherever a similar subject is being written about or discussed. We should probably forgive the site owner, since they can’t control the ad content and need to make a little revenue on the site.

  10. This is such a fantastic site and it’s so sad that Chris Kressler has not taken the time to post to this blog and inform everyone that he has a podcast about the subject he promised to write about: How to get rid of GERD once and for all. It is very frustrating to me, and I’m sure to all of you, however, because he has such great insights I have decided to forgive him. : )) And for all of you here is the answer to your questions. Go to: http://chriskresser.com/naturally-treating-heartburn-infant-reflux-and-stroke-prevention I haven’t listened to it yet, but it appears to be the answers we all are seeking. In any case, it will take you to the newest part of his website and hopefully you can find what you need from there.

    And Chris — thanks for all of your help, but this column REALLY needs a follow up or a link to go to your new section on podcasts, etc. thanks so much though for enlightening me to all of this! I am going to try your suggestions of low-carb and low-fructose, as well as check out the Paleo diet. thanks again1

  11. I am having probs with my stomach growling as if I am hungry. This started a few months ago, and it seems to come and go, but lately is getting worse. Sometimes when I eat something it will ease up or stop, but sometimes it seems to get worse, so I eat something else. I do not have heartburn or GERD (I was diagnosed with that several yrs ago, took Nexium and later insurance switched me to Prevacid–which sometimes later I had severe anemia 2 times and I read about what I was taking for GERD could be the cause of that, so I quit taking). I belch loudly and several times after eating, get bloated sometimes, have excessive gas in the intestines, been diagnosed previously with IBS. My Dr put me on Prilosec and it didn’t help, gave me a prescription for some liquid to take, but insurance didn’t cover it and instead substituted Sucralfate 1GM tablets to take 1 before meals and at bedtime. They didn’t seem to do much either for my prob. What will stop my stomach from making all the gurgling, rumbling sounds and this gnawing feeling that I am hungry when I am not? I gained quite a few pounds over the winter from eating to stop the “hungry feeling”, and I have lost that weight…do not want to gain it back. PLEASE….I am desperate…ty.

  12. I started having problems with heartburn in college, and by the time I graduated I had begun struggling with severe heartburn that lasted up to three weeks and constant stomach pain. My insurance was about to run out and the doctor had ordered another series of expensive tests for me to try and figure out (for the third time in three years) exactly what was going on. All of these tests were the same tests that had already been done and found to be inconclusive. I decided to do something different and made some radical changes to my diet where I have eliminated processed foods and unnatural ingredients as much as possible. Since then, no problems unless I give in and cheat. The other day I had macaroni salad from the grocery store and within an hour I was doubled over in pain. But fresh whole wheat bread that is made without preservatives, or homemade wheat noodles do not cause any problems at all. My food is more expensive, but I eat less of it because it is more satisfying, I am pain and heartburn free and I’ve lost weight. And changing my diet is much cheaper than the doctor’s bills (even with insurance) would have been. This is a great article, very informative. I just thought I would share my experience in case it can be helpful to others.

    • Thank you very much for your sharing. Its helps a lot to us how to take care of our GERD. I’m contemplating of having a check up by a specialist, seems the symptoms persisted. Having been experienced severe stomach pain in 2009-2010 and the doctor prescribed me the Omeprazole (Prosec). Although it relieves me for a quite years, now its back with a vengeance since I didn’t go into diet. Every week I have experienced the pain.

  13. I’m also interested in learning more about what foods to eat and which ones to avoid. I’ve never been diagnosed with GERDS but I do find myself popping Tums nearly daily to treat heartburn. Thank you.

  14. How do I get to the final article of the above article? I did not see a highlighted area leading me there as I did on the other pages. I’m specifically looking for how to start testing for low stomach acid with HCL.
    Thanks!
    Annmarie

  15. You mention there is no proof of a link between ppi’s and anxiety or depression. I am a long-term sufferer of both gerd and anxiety, i was prescribed omeprazole (spelling?) and my anxiety spiked to the worst it had ever been, my doctor did not beleive in a link. I asked Dr Google, and found numerous people with the same complaint, and a number of doctors had attributed it to the prevention of absorbtion of b-vitamins.

  16. Hi Chris,
    I read for hours all your info & got to the end & can’t find the rest. Want to get off Nexium & relieve my horrible acid relux that is up to my ears now, even taking Nexium. Also have bloating & gas from just about everything I eat. Made raw organic veg. & fruit juice every day for 3 months with other only good foods, fresh veggies, cooked & raw , a little chicken & fish, ect. I drink Green Tea with honey & real ginger & then eat the Ginger every day. Tried apple cider vineager & honey twice a day alone for months before any food but ate during the day. Tried Aloe juice by itself before eating & also put aloe in a green food supplement smoothie to boost the immune system. (Gassy), Tried 2 T. olive oil & 2 T lemon juice, only once? I did these on different weeks to see what would work? Where is your answer to all your info to help us get off our meds & heal? Thank you.

  17. Hi Chris,
    It’s been almost 3 years that I’ve been using baking soda instead of toothpaste to brush my teeth, I brush my teeth 2 times a day along with my tongue using baking soda and I also use it as a deodorant.
    I’ve been recently experiencing GERD symptoms and I’m now wondering if it might be a long term side effect of using baking soda instead of toothpaste?
    I tested for h.Pylori around a year and a half ago (and sometime before that too), but the results were negative back then.
    If you think the symptoms are related to baking soda, any ideas on what I could use as a safe alternative to toothpaste? Can baking soda be also harmful in long term when used as a deodorant?
    Thanks.

  18. Dear Chris, you allude to the fact that there is another article explaining how to get rid of acid reflux and GERD without using drugs. Are you still in the process of writing this article or is there a link to it that I am not seeing? All of this information has been very helpful, but that final piece would be really great. Let me know! And thanks for your time and knowledge.
    Jill

    • I have also suffered from GERD for years and have been on PPIs for years. I have been on several, they work for awhile, then stop and I start having horrible symptoms again. I have even thought I was having heart pain or a heart attack at times as the pain radiates into my back, chest, etc. I have been checked by a cardiologist and have had tests run to rule out any heart issues, everything was fine.
      It is a horrible condition and I to would like to know if the final article has been written yet on how to get rid of GERD.
      Thanks for your help!!