Breathing problem: Silent Reflux a hidden epidemic
Often overlooked and misdiagnosed, silent reflux affects over 50 million Americans. The backflow of stomach acid and digestive enzymes (pepsin) can wreak havoc on your esophagus (the food passage that goes from your throat to your stomach), as well as your ears, nose, throat, vocal cords, sinuses, mouth, and lungs. Pepsin, in the presence of acid, digests protein and damages tissue. Outside the protected stomach, pepsin, bathed in acid, digests you! And when pepsin attacks your sensitive airway and esophageal tissues, you can suffer all kinds of problems.
The most common silent reflux symptoms are hoarseness, chronic cough, throat-clearing, post-nasal drip, sinusitis, sore or burning throat, difficulty swallowing, shortness of breath, snoring, sleep apnea, bad breath, tooth decay, asthma, and COPD. Unfortunately, your doctor is probably unaware that these symptoms may be caused by silent reflux and that it could be controlled with the proper diagnosis and treatment.
Did you know that asthma is one of the most common misdiagnoses, because silent reflux mimics asthma? Here’s a big tipoff: When you have trouble breathing, do you have more difficulty getting air IN or OUT? People with reflux have trouble getting air IN during inspiration (not out during expiration). People with asthma have difficulty getting air OUT of the lungs. In truth, many people with “asthma” may not actually have it, and, consequently, asthma medication doesn’t really help much if at all. The fact is that once the correct diagnosis is made, effective anti-reflux treatment can permanently cure this asthma-like breathing problem.
How Do I Know If I Have Silent Reflux?
One of the characteristics of silent reflux is that most people who have it have several different symptoms all at the same time, but often heartburn isn’t one of them.
To find out if you may have silent reflux, take this simple quiz. Just circle the number for each symptom and add up the numbers. The quiz is actually known as the Reflux Symptom Index (RSI), and it is a great first test to see if you have reflux. If your RSI is 15 or more (and you have a zero or one for heartburn), you may have silent reflux; you should see a specialist trained in detecting reflux by examination of both the throat and esophagus. Doctors who only scope the esophagus are missing the boat. Get your printable version of the Reflux Symptom Index.
Why Is Reflux Sometimes Silent?
What makes silent reflux different than heartburn is that the silent reflux sufferer may be unaware of having it, and his or her doctor may not suspect the diagnosis. A lot of reflux is needed to damage the esophagus, but very little reflux can severely damage the more sensitive throat, sinuses and lungs. Many people with silent reflux have never even once experienced classic heartburn.
How the term “silent reflux” came to be is instructive. In 1987, Walter Bo, a medical school colleague, was my patient. As a result of nighttime reflux, he had terrible morning hoarseness. This was because he had a habit of eating dinner very late and then falling asleep on the sofa. Hence, he would reflux into his throat all night.
I tried explaining the problem, but Walter repeatedly denied having reflux. As it turned out, Walter affirmed that he thought that heartburn and reflux were the same. When I was able to explain that one could have reflux without heartburn – as in this example, when it occurred during sleep – Walter rolled his eyes and said, “I see. I have the silent kind of reflux.” I declared, “Yes, Walter, that’s it! You have silent reflux!”
Why Doesn’t My Doctor Know About This?
Unfortunately, people with silent reflux symptoms, even if they ask their doctor, are usually incorrectly told they do not have reflux. The medical specialties are broken down by parts of the body, and doctors are experts in, and only test for, those parts of the body in which they specialize. The problem is that reflux does not care where your doctor trained and how it might affect the different medical specialties – the esophagus treated by gastroenterologists, the throat and sinuses treated by ear, nose and throat specialists (otolaryngologists), and the trachea and lungs treated by lung specialists (pulmonologists).
The Solution: Integrated Aerodigestive Medicine
Only a trained reflux specialist who knows what to look for in all affected areas and who has the right diagnostic tests is equipped to make an accurate diagnosis. Otherwise, a doctor may guess wrong and treat you for an illness that you don’t have. Some of the symptoms of silent reflux can sometimes be caused by other diseases, which doctors try to treat unsuccessfully, leaving you miserable, frustrated, and having wasted money on useless tests and drugs.
Instead of focusing on the patient’s diet and lifestyle – the root cause of almost all reflux disease – doctors often employ pills, usually the wrong pills, that rarely correct the problem. In truth, reflux medications are grossly misused and over-used today.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Lung Health Support Group.
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I just stumbled upon this thread, so I hope you have figured out how to manage your symptoms by now. If not, aloe vera is commonly recommended for acid reflux (maybe not by doctors, but by field adjacent providers, and sufferers). It coats and soothes surfaces. I have never been DX'd with silent reflux but from research have decided I have it due to my symptoms, and the fact that the symptoms are mitigated if I do diet and lifestyle changes. The OP got his information from the web site of ENT Jamie Koufman. You can google her and find out more if you are still interested in the topic.
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1 Reactionwhat meds were u Rx that u could not tolerate?
I had radiation to a lung nodule the end of last year and a couple of months later I started experiencing wheezing, coughing, and difficulty breathing. We thought this was pneumonitis and I was put on a long regimen of prednisone. Now that I'm off it, I'm still experiencing a lot of the same symptoms, including almost constant post-nasal drip. I was just told by an ENT doctor that I have silent reflux, so a lot of the symptoms I thought were lung-related weren't caused by the radiation at all. She prescribed me omeprazole, which hasn't done anything. I get some relief using famotidine, but nothing dramatic. The constant need to cough to clear my throat when I feel a "wheeze" vibrating in my upper esophagus has become really annoying... it goes away, and then a minute later it's back again. I've been dealing with this now for most of the year. I don't understand what caused it, as I've never had any difficulties with reflux or heartburn. It also affects my breathing... I notice if I'm exerting myself, like coming up two flights of stairs with heavy grocery bags, the "back up" of reflux and subsequent wheezing seems to get worse and feels like it's blocking my airway. I love coffee, spicy foods, chocolate, and an occasional glass of wine, and now I guess they're all forbidden. I'm wondering if this condition ever goes away, or if I'm stuck with it for life. My understanding is there is surgery called fundoplication they can perform to stop it but I'm not sure I'll be able to persuade my ENT doc to do it. I'm curious if anyone else has has this surgery performed and if it helped. I'm definitely going request an endoscopy.
The article about Silent GERD is very realtive to me. My GI Doc says that it Impossible. My Excellent Larynxgologist (who examed me in 2015 for severe throat hoaresness and found dysplasia growth on my left vocal chord and removed it) told me I was suffering form Silent Gerd. he showed me the videos of my throat marred with little red dots. The GI doc says I have IBS which is reflective of my anxiousness for many years (constant Stomach Bloating). The ENT doc has insisted for me to follow a strict diet, which I have neglected to follow , foolishly. I will add that I have many Spinal Maladies including Spondyliosis, sites of Stenosis, disc Bulges, and Dextroscoliosis of 25 degrees (Lumbar to Thoracic Spine). With Advanced Degenerative Disc Disease form head to tail , affecting my well being with chronic pains and significant Stiffness. No drugs were Pushed on Me by the ENT , primarily Lifetsyle and Dietary changes. I will try to follow that medical advice more closely. The article is spot on - throat clearing, hoarseness, Sinusitis, on & off coughing, Post nasal drip.
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2 Reactions@dougmck I know people that the surgery helped. With me it did not help. I’m still looking for answers. I will be having an esophageal ph test next week at Mayo in Jacksonville. I eat and drink mostly by the rules of GERD. I still experience the symptoms you described.
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2 ReactionsRSI number a 2