Acid Reflux or GERD information,acid reflux causes, complications, gerd symptoms, acid reflux treatment, drug therapy, medication, nutrition, herbal treatment, and other information

Showing posts with label GERD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GERD. Show all posts

Monday, October 6, 2008

Gastrointestinal Disease | Gastrointestinal Reflux Disease


Gastrointestinal Diseases:

  • Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD)
  • Peptic Ulcer Disease
  • Barrett's Esophagus
  • Hepatitis
  • Inflammatory Bowel Disease (Crohn's and Ulcerative Colitis)
  • Irritable Bowel Syndrome
  • Hemorrhoids
  • Diverticulosis


What is Gastrointestinal Disease?
By: Dr. Anshu Gupta

Also called: Digestive Diseases

When you eat, your body breaks food down to a form it can use to build and nourish cells and provide energy. This process is called digestion.

Your digestive system is a series of hollow organs joined in a long, twisting tube. It runs from your mouth to your anus and includes your esophagus, stomach, and small and large intestines. Your liver, gallbladder and pancreas are also involved. They produce juices to help digestion.

There are many types of digestive disorders. The symptoms vary widely depending on the problem. In general, you should see your doctor if you have

* Blood in your stool
* Changes in bowel habits
* Severe abdominal pain
* Unintentional weight loss
* Heartburn not relieved by antacids

Gastrointestinal (GI) disease refer to ulcerative disorders of the upper gastrointestinal tract. Stomach acids and some enzymes can damage the lining of the G.I. tract if natural protective factors are not functioning normally.

The GI research strategy focuses on gaining a better understanding of the genetic basis of GI diseases (e.g., Crohn’s disease) and the pathophysiology associated with these diseases, including mucosal barrier function and innate immunity, and on neural control of motility and perception.

GI concentrates on inflammatory bowel diseases such as Crohn’s Disease and ulcerative colitis, as well as irritable bowel syndrome and gastroparesis.

Symptoms of gastrointestinal disease are indigestion, heartburn, nausea, loss of appetite, abdominal pain that is often worse after eating, and gastrointestinal bleeding (signs of this are vomiting material that looks like coffee-grounds, or having dark stools). Some other symptoms are acid bile reflux in the throat, asthma-like symptoms, often irritable bowel syndrome, chronic poor digestion with sharp abdominal and chest pains, hoarseness and chronic cough.

Causes of gastrointestinal disease are aspirin use, alcohol and tobacco use, poor diet (to many fried, fatty foods, sugar and refined foods), poor food combining, drinking with meals, over eating especially spicy foods, eating to fast or to often, food allergies, candida overgrowth, stress, serious illness.

Various pathogens, which usually get into our body through contaminated food and water, can produce an infection of the gastrointestinal tract. This manifests itself in diarrhea, often accompanied by pains in the stomach, nausea and vomiting. Among the most frequent pathogens at fault are the e-coli bacteria, salmonella and poison from staphylococcus.

Other causes of gastrointestinal disease may be reflux injury (such as bile backing up into the stomach and esophagus, trauma (for example surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, severe vomiting and having swallowed a foreign object), bacterial, viral, fungal and parasitic infections, pernicious anemia and systemic disease for example (Crohn's) disease.

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Saturday, November 24, 2007

What is Acid Reflux or GERD?

* When you eat or drink something, the food or liquid reaches your stomach by passing from your throat, behind your voice box, and then through a muscular tube called the esophagus to arrive in your stomach.
* Once the food reaches your stomach, your stomach puts out acid and pepsin (a digestive enzyme) to digest the food.
* Your esophagus has two sphincters (bands of muscle fibers that close off the tube) to help keep the digested food, acid, and pepsin where they belong.

  1. The first sphincter is at the top of the esophagus at its junction with the upper throat just behind the larynx.
  2. The second sphincter is at the bottom of the esophagus at its junction with the stomach. Normally this remains closed until the bolus of food and/or liquid reaches it. However, in many individuals including children, the muscle tone is poor. The sphincter remains open, allowing stomach contents to "reflux" up the esophagus and into the throat.
  3. The refluxed stomach contents may even be aspirated into the trachea, bronchi, and lungs, causing further difficulties.There may also be a hiatal hernia associated with acid reflux. This is a condition in which part of the stomach slides up above the diaphragm into the chest. Not only do symptoms of reflux occur, but there may be pain around the lower part of the sternum.



What is GERD or LPR?

* Acid Reflux occurs when stomach contents pass up into the esophagus and sometimes into the throat. There are two types of reflux which may occur independently or together.

* GERD (Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease):
This occurs with an excessive amount of reflux of stomach acid up through the lower sphincter and into the esophagus. This is commonly associated with "heartburn", which occurs in almost 100% of patients with GERD.

* LPR (Laryngopharyngeal Reflux):
This occurs when reflux into the esophagus extends above the upper sphincter into the throat. The structures and tissues of the larynx (voice box), throat, trachea, bronchi, and lungs are more sensitive to stomach acid and digestive enzymes than the esophagus. It usually occurs without heartburn. Only 14% or less of the patients with this problem experience heartburn.

GERD occurs chiefly because of the following three reasons:
  1. The esophagus's normal defenses are overwhelmed by the acid content of the stomach.
  2. The contents of the stomach are too acidic .
  3. The food is not cleared from the esophagus fast enough.
The Type of Acid Reflux:
  1. When "refluxed" stomach acid touches the lining of the esophagus, it causes a burning sensation in the chest or throat called heartburn. Heartburn that occurs more than twice a week may be considered GERD
  2. The fluid may even reach the back of the mouth, and this is called acid indigestion.
Long-term effects of acid reflux:

Acid reflux into the esophagus and throat may cause the following:
  • Barrett's esophagitis
  • Cancer of the esophagus
  • Adult-onset asthma
  • Possibly cancer of the larynx
resource : Dochazenfield

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