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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

Join the conversation

  1. What is the connection with gerd and a increase pulse and bp? My wife was in the hospital for two days ….with no help.
    After your fantastic article I believe the low acid in stomach is the cause.
    Last night she ate pizza and within an hour 115 pulse and she felt like garbage. She has been belching a lot over the past couple months and it is worse now. Is there a connection to stress and
    Aggravating this too?

    Thank you.

  2. How do I find the final article? I put this in my favorites and now I seem to be in limbo.

  3. I just realized that my 17 year old daughter loves pasta which has a lot of carbs. Could that be causing bacterial overgrowth?

  4. Why does a person have low levels of stomach acid in the first place and what can you do to increase the levels? I am looking forward to future articles. My 17 year old daughter has GERD and is on 20 mg of prilosec 2 times a day. I want to get her off of the medicine as soon as possible and find an alternative. She is a singer and the reflex irritates her throat and prevents her from singing so for now I have no choice but to leave her on the medicine.

  5. Hi There Chris,
    Does you know why your stomach start to produce less HCL acid in the first place?,sorry if you have touched on it already I may have missed it.

  6. Hi, my name is Nada. I don’t know where to start with my story.

    It all started about 2 years go when I got something like a stomach flu. It could have been something else, I’m not sure. I just remember having these crazy symptoms like pain, not being able to go to the bathroom for a few days, and then took laxatives which did not even work, and then if I recall correctly I had really bad diarrhea. When I did go to the bathroom after that I had dark pebble like stool (sorry for the graphics) I had no idea what was going on went to the doctor who did nothing except tell me it was from stress. The stool was tested and turned out “normal”. I took peoples advice and ate yogurt, drank soda, ate soft foods. Which was probably a bad idea.
    It all changed from that time. I was having indigestion, sorry if this is too graphic but there was always undigested food in my stool, and they tested a sample of it which turned out normal…. My stomach used to hurt when I ate and so I decided to eliminate certain foods from my diet to see what was causing the discomfort. So I cut out dairy and bread. Sort of went vegan. I did that for a week, and I had so much energy, and no more gas, bloating, and my stomach making weird noises. I found out that my symptoms were occuring whenever I ate dairy! So I stopped eating dairy from then on. I also used to get nauseous almost always.
    Thats when I started going form doctor to doctor again. First my primary care doctor, then a specialist, then moved and went to another specialist, and was prescribed several medicines to “try.” I had an endoscopy and colonoscopy done, which is kind of good so that I can assure myself I’m on the safe side and don’t have something going on that I should know about. The results turned out normal, except that I had a little inflammation and acid reflux. I was put on the PPI “Pantoprazole” (40 mg) for about 3-4 months.
    Then after a long process, when I started getting very fatigued), and was almost misdiagnosed with Fibromyalgia, I found out I was very deficient in Vitamin D. This is when I started increasing my intake of calcium and Viatmin D through Soymilk and things like that. I was also put on a high does of viamin d.
    Now, I’m having alot of neurological problems, and might need to have an EMG done, which I’m dreading. I dont trust most doctors anymore… its really starting to feel like everything they do is for money. They just want to treat your symptoms, not cure the underlying cause.
    I’m only 19 years old….
    My stomach symptoms havent went away, now I’m not sure if I have low stomach acid or if its something like Candida…. since I have had recurring yeast infections. See, I’m not a doctor and its hard for me to diagnose myself. (Even though I was the one who found out about my vitamin deficiency through lots of research!) its their job! and its sad the way they are handling it. I simply dont have the time to be online finding a cure for myself being a full time college student. But my health is important so I guess I have to make the time. It just sucks because its one thing after another. I’m so glad I came across this article because it opens up so many different explanations and opportunities for a variety of treatment methods. If you read all of that, thank you so much. I’m just hoping someone will read this and be able to point in in some direction….. I dont think ill ever take antacids again. I might just start trying different remedies that restore stomach/gut health. I cant take pepsin because I cant have pork, and so I might find another betaine hcl brand and try that…again, not even sure if i have low acid…. and im pretty sure i dont have alot of good bacteria in my stomach…. but the things chris mentioned in the article, like those fermented recipes, i dont think id be able to get those. Would probiotics be good enough?
    It wouldnt be the worst thing ever to not eat dairy for the rest of my life though it does become a hassle. Especially since I know I wasnt born like this. I hope i get to the bottom of this soon. And good luck to anyone going through their own battle!

    • What about using a CPTG essential oil? Oregano oil is supposed to be a powerful antibiotic. Lavender, wild orange, & peppermint are supposed to be tummy tamers. What about licorice dgl? Even melatonin for a short while may help.

      • Hi Lisa great advice natural is for me the best way.
        I personally just started on Lily of the desert Aloe Vera Juice for what they claim I have.My daily routine is now this HCP 70 (Probiotic),Omega Essential fish oil, Vegegreen,and Phytoberry smoothies been taking this for years : ) just pumping it all up to get rid of the damage the PPI”s did to me.And I know deep inside this is what triggered the burning I am now feeling.

  7. I am successfully using 2 teaspoons of apple cider vinegar with 4 ounces of warm water and a squirt of honey twice daily to help with acid reflux. After the first 2 weeks, it has been as successful as antacids. Besides, there are numerous health benefits to apple cider vinegar! It’s worth a try and inexpensive too.

  8. I have gerds because I have a hernia, I was on antacid meds only as a preventative so stomach acid doesn’t damage my esophagus, I discovered it wasn’t good to stay on the meds permanently. so I went off, but now I am having some symptoms that show me damage is being done to my esophagus. How do I stop that without taking the meds?

  9. Hey i got prescribed PPIs and took them for months and had no relief and ended up having a endoscopy from the top and bottom and they found atrophic gastritis but didnt know why it was happening. I now read your article and it all makes sense.. my acid was surpressed for far too long..
    i dont take the PPIs anymore but i am also not fully healed. My main problem now is that anything i eat i get allergic type reactions.. coughing mucus, nasal burning and congestion, red teary eyes etc.. allergy meds dont do anything. I think the food is going into my stomach and there is still not much acid there to properly break down the food and i end up getting these reactions.

    Please tell me what to do and how to correct this situation and go back to normal.. please! i am so desperate at this point. No doctor can help as they dont know whats wrong.. and if u can believe it they are trying to get me to take MORE PPIs again!

    i hope u can get back to me or email me..

    thanks

    • Try drinking a small amount of coca cola and if you need to cough something out from doing this it is a good thing to be rid of it. It always helps to neutralize AND give me the necessary acid BOTH.

  10. Hi Chris,
    What would recommend for someone who has hiatal hernia? Without Prilosec I pretty much get heartburn from anything I eat.
    I’ve been taking it for almost 7 years now and just recently came to the conclusion that it maybe the cause of my abdominal pain for the last three years and other symptoms you mention in a lesser degree.
    If I don’t take the pill I risk esophagus cancer and if I do I risk stomach cancer. A no win situation….
    Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
    Thanks!

    • I took Gaviscon, only thing that cleared the hiatal hernia pain. It completely went away and that was a long time ago. this is what the doctor told me to take. gaviscon.

    • I recently, through a routine, endoscopy, discovered that
      I had h. pylori, and 2 bleeding ulcers. I was treated with
      2 antibiotics + 6 pepto bismol chewable tablets tablets
      daily, plus 40 mg of nexium for a 10 day regiment. after
      a month I was rescheduled for a repeat endoscopy, with
      an ultrasound. biopsies were taken to insure the eradication
      of the h. pylori infection, and a potentially , cancerous stromal tumor. I haven’t received results to date. my symptoms seem to parallel a low acid
      stomach. what probiotic supplement and diet should I be adhering to, to alleviate my situation ???

  11. How about Pantoprazole? I was on 40mg of that for about 3 months. I regret every single pill I took. I’m sick of doctors always prescribing medicine that provides temporary relief yet causes long term health issues, which are often worse than you start out with. I’m really losing my trust in doctors. I feel like I’m right back where I started after I stopped taking it! Would you say 3-4 months is enough to cause harm as well and lower stomach acid?
    🙁

    • I’m with you on that one but what are we to do.Sadly unlike you I had not one symptom of any problems with my digestive until I started on the same pill you are taking!!!
      Now I can say I have digestive problems and am truly pissed at this.When they cant figure it out leave it alone.
      I truly believe they have to dispense a certain amount of drugs for there end year quota.As my Family ate lots of fatty foods when I was growing up and they all lived past 90 no pills like what they hand out now a days.

  12. Where is the last article as I need to learn how to get off this Nexium ASAP and preferably naturally.

    Help! And thanks for all the information!

  13. I’m 45 and I have been on dexilant 40mg for the last year and a half, before that I was on pantaloc and before that prilosec. During the Christmas holidays I fell ill to a gastric virus, to which latter on I got laryngitis and then bronchitis. Meanwhile there was always and excess burn in my throat. Last week I got the flu, and bronchitis came back again. I told my Doctor about the burn in my throat and that I believe my lung problem is from my acid reflux. He agreed and changed my meds again to pantoloc. The burning has not subsided my lungs don’t feel any better and when I ask my Doctor for an alternate solution he says I must stay on the PPI’s. Can anyone help I can’t go on like this any more.

  14. I have been on Prilosec 40mg for nearly four years no, the past two months have been a living nightmare for my stomach and GERD. It seems I have had more issues taking this poison Prilosec then I did before I started. I have often suggest to my GI doctor that low acid levels could be causing my problems, but he won’t hear any of that… His response, you would feel a lot worse if you didn’t take it. I am so glad I found this article, and I’m changing doctors before he kills me.

    • Hi to all

      Jason I am going through the same thing. It all started when I was rushed to the hospital they drew blood and said my pancreas enzymes had elevated to 5,000 ask how much I drank(alcohol) told them I was a non drinker.So they called it idiopathic and said chances are it will never happen again…three weeks later back in ER this time with 7,000 enzymes.So they were baffled! So next best thing when they don’t know the cause yep anti depressants and PPI’s both to which made me quite sick.Quick the anti depression pills and continued on PPI’s.Told both my family and specialist Dr that I was getting a burning sensation that I never had before and white tongue they told me not to worry about it basically I need these pills.
      I was then tested and was told by phone that I had Barrett’s of the esophagus (no cancer) and so this is why I should be on PPI’s and anti-depression pills!!! I said it is quite funny that since I have been on a very strict diet 15 grams of fat per day and taking 80mg PPI’s a day I have never before experience burning or nausea like I do now HELL I use to love red pepper rings I don’t dare eat them now. But what scares me is that they imbed that I will develop cancer if I stop the PPI’s.So whats a person to do continue on medication that causes you pain and symptoms I never had before or chance dying of cancer?
      I read this someplace and it is so true>The pharmaceutical industry does not create cures,they create CUSTOMERS! And whats worse is that in the long run the customer who takes these drugs must recover twice,once from the disease and once from the medication”< William Osler M.D.
      Anyways I feel for you and anyone else that feel they are not being heard.Also Chris GREAT site but like many others am wondering as to where the rest of you article is?

  15. I have been on PPIs off and on (more on than off) for about 20 years. When first prescribed this “wonder” drug I was working in a fast paced news environment. My doctor thought that perhaps I had pylori; however, this was not the case. After five years I thought I would like to get off them. My family doctor said that I could try, but he found that most patients usually were back on them within six months. And true to his projection, I was back on them within six months. At this time (probably around 1995) there was not much information as to the long-term damage that might occur. Although I have severe reflux, chronic rhinitis, and severe nausea (my primary complaint) the numerous endoscopies and colonoscopies the only problem that shows up is severe diverticulosis, but have not had any episodes of diverticulitis. My gastroenterologist (who is very well known in research in his field) feels that perhaps I am just “one of those sensitive stomachs”. I have been on 40 mg Nexium twice a day along with 10mg of domperidone ½ hour before meals and sometimes before bedtime. I eat extremely well—no fat, chicken, fish, lots of greens, veggies, fiber, water, fruits, minimal cheese, no pop, liquor, etc. etc. I am 68 years old now, 5’8” tall and weigh 133 lbs., so I am not overweight. Last year I had severe nausea that ended me up in the hospital several times. Something quirky with my stress test and the nausea and chest pain, prompted them to do an angiogram, which showed that my arteries are pretty well plaque free. I exercise daily. So . . . in November 2013 I decided that I must get off the Nexium. I read a report about a Brazilian doctor who did a study about getting the body to produce melatonin that would help with GERD. I started a very slow reduction of nexium in November—starting with the 40 mg; then 40 mg alternating with 20mg; then 20 mg for a week; then 20 mg alternating with 10 mg (cut a 20mg in half); then 10 mg for a week; alternate 10 mg with 0 mg; then 0 mg. All the while I have been taking Protexid with this, which is tryptophan, methionine, B12, B6 folic acid, betaine. In the beginning I took melatonin at night; however, in correspondence with the Brazilian doctor, he advised me to stop the melatonin as I was trying to get my body to produce melatonin on its own. Well, long story short, I was much better initially, but it seems that I still have the horrible nausea and it’s terribly debilitating and depressing. I never know how I’m going to feel so can’t make any plans to do anything in advance. I have tried ginger, Iberogast, gravol, but nothing seems to get this nausea to disappear. At one time my nausea was so severe I was prescribed Zofran; however, I try to get through with gravol. I have had blood work done, CAT scans, Uppper GI series, brain, neck and back MRIs, nerve testing, and see an ENT regularly. I meditate and exercise daily. I don’t know where to go from here. Could this just be a severe rebound effect since I have been on ppis for so long?

    • Non Ulcer Functional Dyspepsia is what I was dx with when my only complaint was a burning, sour stomach, nauseous feeling in my gut. I had the ultrasounds on galbladder, pancreas, stomach, liver. Nothing. I had an endoscopy which showed a “boring stomach.” Gastro doc prescribed 10 mg desipramine. It’s an older tricyclic anti-depressant. Guess what? No more functional dyspepsia. That was in 09. I might have a day of FD once or twice a year, but that’s it. 4 years ago I developed “silent reflux” / LPR, so that’s what I’m dealing with now. :/

  16. was wondering, that if “acidity” is more often due to lack of enough stomach acid, then why taking a antacid helps, in the short term.

  17. This past summer I was diagnosed with H pylori for the second time in my life. It was eradicated with a double course of antibiotics. I was then told to eat Greek yogurt for approximately 2 months in order to put good bacteria back into my stomach. Soon afterwards my gallbladder went out and I had to have it removed. About the beginning of this last December I noticed that I started having very bad heartburn and acid reflux. About a week ago I went to the doctor with it and found it I was not having h.pylori again and was diagnosed with acid reflux. I was placed on Nexium 40 milligrams delayed release. After a weeks course of this I found that it was wearing off after half a day so they doubled the dosage. After reading this article I am highly skeptical and very concerned! I want to know what I need to do in order to get my stomach back in good shape so that I don’t have to worry about things going very wrong. I’m worried, scared and in a lot of pain in Atlanta all at the same time! Please help.