GERD: What helps long term?

Posted by littleonefmohio @littleonefmohio, Apr 19, 2018

Does anyone know what I can take for GERD long term? I never had it until they removed my gallbladder. Since then I have been living in hell. I cannot take pain medication, antidepressants, of course certain foods. I have tried prilosec, nexium, and now take tums and zantac. I have severe GERD where I feel i am having a heart attack. I think it was in October of last year I was taken to the hospital with it because it seem much worse than before. At that time they ran every test for heart problems and thank God I do not have heart disease. I Cannot bend over to work in my yard like I love too mostly because of that. Also wanted to ask if anyone heard that Tums would give you Alzheimers? I will have to take 3 or more sometimes to get the pain to stop. That is the only thing I found that works with the Zantac but I am worried about the Alzheimers since my grandfather had it. I also need to get my teeth pulled but am scared to death of the pain since I cannot take pain killers.

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Profile picture for bonnieh218 @bonnieh218

I’m looking for anyone that is successfully treating their reflux with diet or supplements instead of drugs. In reading about the drugs used to treat reflux disease, I’m reading that they play a role in bone destruction. I have osteoporosis so I’m reluctant to start any drugs prescribed for reflux. Any suggestions would be most appreciated.Bonnie

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Thank you for the list. For me the most difficult thing to refuse is coffee. The biggest compromise I made for myself is low acid coffee. Surprisingly there are a lot of decent brands. Now I drink Tieman's Fusion.

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Profile picture for stillc @stillc

Thank you for the list. For me the most difficult thing to refuse is coffee. The biggest compromise I made for myself is low acid coffee. Surprisingly there are a lot of decent brands. Now I drink Tieman's Fusion.

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I also live with Gerd. As a substitute for coffee, you might try “Caf-Lib”, the uncoffee. This is a grain beverage with Chicory. It comes in both regular and organic. All natural ingredients - extract of roasted malt, barley and roasted chicory. I live in Canada and available at large chain grocery stores here but also at Amazon

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Profile picture for bonnieh218 @bonnieh218

I’m looking for anyone that is successfully treating their reflux with diet or supplements instead of drugs. In reading about the drugs used to treat reflux disease, I’m reading that they play a role in bone destruction. I have osteoporosis so I’m reluctant to start any drugs prescribed for reflux. Any suggestions would be most appreciated.Bonnie

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I have a hiatal hernia plus gastroparesis. I take 40mg of lansopresol before breakfast. I have tried diets and OTC heartburn meds with no luck. If I even forget the med one morning, I know by evening that I did. It’s a quality of life issue for me to stay on the drug.

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Profile picture for tsafer @tsafer

I also live with Gerd. As a substitute for coffee, you might try “Caf-Lib”, the uncoffee. This is a grain beverage with Chicory. It comes in both regular and organic. All natural ingredients - extract of roasted malt, barley and roasted chicory. I live in Canada and available at large chain grocery stores here but also at Amazon

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I used to use Teeccino as my coffee substitute for GERD issues. It has a great coffee taste plus offers various flavored 'coffees' - available at Whole Foods and online @ Amazon. It also has chicory in it which I have since learned is an ingredient that aggravates my digestion for another reason b/c it is a high FODMAP ingredient.

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Profile picture for bonnieh218 @bonnieh218

I’m looking for anyone that is successfully treating their reflux with diet or supplements instead of drugs. In reading about the drugs used to treat reflux disease, I’m reading that they play a role in bone destruction. I have osteoporosis so I’m reluctant to start any drugs prescribed for reflux. Any suggestions would be most appreciated.Bonnie

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I control GERD by diet. I watch what I eat and don,t eat after7PM

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Profile picture for macombs @macombs

I control GERD by diet. I watch what I eat and don,t eat after7PM

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Great!! Hoping that always works for you!!

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Profile picture for gloria811 @gloria811

Great!! Hoping that always works for you!!

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thank you

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Profile picture for bonnieh218 @bonnieh218

I’m looking for anyone that is successfully treating their reflux with diet or supplements instead of drugs. In reading about the drugs used to treat reflux disease, I’m reading that they play a role in bone destruction. I have osteoporosis so I’m reluctant to start any drugs prescribed for reflux. Any suggestions would be most appreciated.Bonnie

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What kind of fruit do you eat

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Profile picture for bonnieh218 @bonnieh218

I’m looking for anyone that is successfully treating their reflux with diet or supplements instead of drugs. In reading about the drugs used to treat reflux disease, I’m reading that they play a role in bone destruction. I have osteoporosis so I’m reluctant to start any drugs prescribed for reflux. Any suggestions would be most appreciated.Bonnie

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I'm eating a low acid diet for Gerd and Barrett esophagus. For fruit I eat ripe bananas because they have less acid in them. I also eat mixed melon. Stay away from lemons or limes because they burn the throat and esophagus on the way down. I also eat blueberrys with raspberries and a ripe banana in a blender with unsweetened almond milk which neutralizes the acid in the fruit. I got that recipe from the acid watcher diet book written by a Dr. My last upper scope they saw NO sign of Barretts esophagus so it must work. Great info in the book for Gerd people and it tells you about myths like lemon and limes are good for you! Good Luck!

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Profile picture for bonnieh218 @bonnieh218

I’m looking for anyone that is successfully treating their reflux with diet or supplements instead of drugs. In reading about the drugs used to treat reflux disease, I’m reading that they play a role in bone destruction. I have osteoporosis so I’m reluctant to start any drugs prescribed for reflux. Any suggestions would be most appreciated.Bonnie

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Hello, everyone. I've had reflux for 30+ years. This is what I am dealing with and how my gastro doctors at Mayo Clinic Florida are helping me with the various issues.

I had an endoscopy at Mayo 3 weeks ago, the first since 2015. Diagnosed with Barrett's esophagus in 2015 which is stable due to diet control, Schazki Ring in 2021 ~ scar tissue in a ring created by the esophagus for protection from damage caused by stomach acid and since gall bladder removal, liver bile. The body taking care of itself, protecting against rupture. That ring also causes me swallowing problems. At times, I have problems swallowing liquids or food. It gets stuck in the upper esophagus and I can feel it as it gradually, often quite slowly and painfully, moves down the esophageal tube. It gets stuck midway, at the sternum, where the ring now exists, and the Barrett's and makes a painful trip to the stomach when I change position or straighten up more. It helps to get the esophagus in a straight position so foods move down better.

Mother did help me work on my posture growing up....but over the years with herniated discs and broken vertebra, I've lost 4 inches in height, so I suppose there's some repositioning of the internal organs with that much change in space.

I also have a hiatel hernia diagnosed as moderate in 2015. The recent endoscopy doesn't show a hernia. Wild, isn't it? It's not gone, the docs say they don't heal themselves, but at times the hernia can't be seen since it sometimes folds itself up into the esophagus. I just found out my stomach will sometimes actually move into the esophagus when I bend over, and it does hurt, or when I use the diaphram muscles to get out of bed or raise up....it can be pushed up into the esophageal tube. I'm learning more to best handle those situations.

I will have a 2nd endoscopy balloon procedure next Monday to stretch the Schazki Ring as far as possible w/o rupture. That will help ease the swallowing. I questioned having another procedure w/sedation so soon. Both gastro and neuro have given me the ok, so I'm doing it for quality of life. I have severe sleep apnea and use a bi-pap nightly, so must have complete sedation for a breathing tube.

I have success handling reflux issues through the years with diet changes. It's not difficult, actually pretty easy, requiring a mind change. I had to make a decision about what was important to me. It meant not eating some favorites, being careful. I eat no cooked tomatoes, limit onions, NO vinegar in anything, that means no pickles, many sauces, no citrus at all anymore, no cucumbers, fruit is ok but only berries now, no melons. I often have Greek yogurt parfait for breakfast, with 4 different berries topped with granola. I get them at the grocery store - Publix...healthy, helps digestion, gut in general, helps w/IBS and antibiotics, yogurt neutralizes the fruits and is my source of Calcium due to milk sensitivity.

Your 'smoothie' with almond milk and fruit is wonderful. I do the same. I get fresh fruit, berries, always blueberries, bananas, clean/cut and freeze it in baggies, and use that with almond milk and unsweetened, no flavor added or vanilla protein powder. No added water or ice.This makes a wonderful, easily digested, smoothie for a meal. I don't do the same with veggies.

I use no spices now other than garlic powder, fresh ground black pepper, no salt for other health reasons, eat nothing spicy or very strong. I have to be very careful to stay away from most Italian foods due to sauces and tomatoes. Salmon and most white fish, chicken, nothing fried at all ever, limited chocolate, limited coffee-1-2 cups and green tea daily.

OK. That gives you an idea. Not much excitement in my foods, but I find I can eat well and healthy and enjoy the foods. It's a real change in life-style...oh, no alcohol ever!...but I live with less pain and no reflux attacks or return of food. I do take Protonix 2X daily and that with diet control the reflux fairly well. Also, I never eat after 6-7 at night, give my insides a few hours before lying down. I've lived for years with my head elevated, either on pillows or better now with foam wedges under the head of my mattress.

This is a long message for which I apologize, but I'm hopeful the information I've shared and my experiences will help someone who's having trouble with reflux. It's not easy, but you can keep it under control to some degree and give yourself some relief. I found I need both medication, as little as possible, and diet control. And, stay on top of annual endoscopy.

Blessings on your journey with this condition. elizabeth

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