Getting Off of Omeprazole: Share your success stories please.

Posted by Bonnie @nightngale1998, Jun 26, 2018

Hi there: Has anyone had success in weaning off of Omeprazole? I take it for GERD. Thank you in advance!

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@t98

If you've been taking the PPI for 3 years, then you have to wean yourself off slowly, otherwise you'll have rebound acid. So I suggest getting a 20 mg dose and reducing to that for a number of days (look on the internet - some say 10 days), and then if you feel ok you can stop the 20 mg one day but take it the next day and taper off slowly. Let us know how it goes.

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Ok thanks for the suggestion. I’ve been taking Omeprazole just about : years. I only had one “attack” of intense bloating and gas before getting that upper GI that showed a sliding hiatal hernia. I’ll take it every other day then and see how that goes for a week or so. Then try every 3 days. It’s a capsule form. The doctor said just quit and manage it over the counter until the symptoms fade or I could go back to taking it. It’s an experiment I guess ..with me as the guinea pig.

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@ginabeana

Ok thanks for the suggestion. I’ve been taking Omeprazole just about : years. I only had one “attack” of intense bloating and gas before getting that upper GI that showed a sliding hiatal hernia. I’ll take it every other day then and see how that goes for a week or so. Then try every 3 days. It’s a capsule form. The doctor said just quit and manage it over the counter until the symptoms fade or I could go back to taking it. It’s an experiment I guess ..with me as the guinea pig.

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3 years with no other acid attacks.

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I was on omeprazole and then ranitidine for 10 years. I considered a fundoplication or linx at one point. I’ve been PPI-free for 2 years. Like others have said, tapering off is key. It’s really important to understand what is causing the reflux. In my case, it wasn’t a weak esophageal sphincter or excess stomach acid according to a manometry and other tests. After researching more alternative explanations, I think it was bad microbiome and low stomach acid along with too much processed food. What ultimately worked for me was elevating head of bed 6 inches, nothing to eat after dinner, high quality probiotics ( I take New Chapter), adding kefir and other fermented food items regularly, adding magnesium and zinc to my supplements, recognizing and avoiding my trigger foods, eating smaller portions, and chewing the heck out of food. I’m not recommending this regimen for you as I have no idea what is causing your issues and am not qualified to offer direction. I just want to share my success story because there was a time when it seemed hopeless that I’d get my situation under control. It’s not perfect, but much, much better. I wish everyone the best.

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@dianecostella

I was on it for years. I had Fundoplacation surgery and just stopped taking it. I was fine no side effects.

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Is the fundoplication scary? Any side effects? I've heard about it and considered it as a permanent solution to my GERD.

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I got off Omeprazole because of a suspicion that it caused inflamation flare ups in my joints.. mostly my hands and wrist.

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@nexus

I was on omeprazole and then ranitidine for 10 years. I considered a fundoplication or linx at one point. I’ve been PPI-free for 2 years. Like others have said, tapering off is key. It’s really important to understand what is causing the reflux. In my case, it wasn’t a weak esophageal sphincter or excess stomach acid according to a manometry and other tests. After researching more alternative explanations, I think it was bad microbiome and low stomach acid along with too much processed food. What ultimately worked for me was elevating head of bed 6 inches, nothing to eat after dinner, high quality probiotics ( I take New Chapter), adding kefir and other fermented food items regularly, adding magnesium and zinc to my supplements, recognizing and avoiding my trigger foods, eating smaller portions, and chewing the heck out of food. I’m not recommending this regimen for you as I have no idea what is causing your issues and am not qualified to offer direction. I just want to share my success story because there was a time when it seemed hopeless that I’d get my situation under control. It’s not perfect, but much, much better. I wish everyone the best.

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yes to your new protocole! I have arrived at the very same findings and it helps a lot!
Also cutting out wine.

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@nexus

I was on omeprazole and then ranitidine for 10 years. I considered a fundoplication or linx at one point. I’ve been PPI-free for 2 years. Like others have said, tapering off is key. It’s really important to understand what is causing the reflux. In my case, it wasn’t a weak esophageal sphincter or excess stomach acid according to a manometry and other tests. After researching more alternative explanations, I think it was bad microbiome and low stomach acid along with too much processed food. What ultimately worked for me was elevating head of bed 6 inches, nothing to eat after dinner, high quality probiotics ( I take New Chapter), adding kefir and other fermented food items regularly, adding magnesium and zinc to my supplements, recognizing and avoiding my trigger foods, eating smaller portions, and chewing the heck out of food. I’m not recommending this regimen for you as I have no idea what is causing your issues and am not qualified to offer direction. I just want to share my success story because there was a time when it seemed hopeless that I’d get my situation under control. It’s not perfect, but much, much better. I wish everyone the best.

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No food or alcohol after dinner, avoiding trigger foods worked for me.

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@contentandwell

@beckymel I feel negligent because it has somehow escaped me that my levothyroxine could be contributing to my osteoporosis as could the omeprazole that I took for several years. I am also on prednisone which is a major cause of osteoporosis so I attributed it to that.

I started doing Tymlos injections a couple of weeks ago because my osteoporosis has gotten quite advanced. Unfortunately, there is no drug for osteoporosis without side effects, but I think that's true of all drugs. From what I have heard the percentage of people on drugs for osteoporosis who have serious side-effects are in a small minority.

I guess we all just have to forge ahead with hopes we will not be a part of that small minority with serious side-effects.
JK

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Hi JK,
I am on Omeprezole and Prednisone. I also have been told that I need to take Tymlos. Can I ask how the Tymlos treatment is going for you? I'm a little nervous about the side effects. Did you have any? If so how long? Any suggestions for me would be appreciated. I understand that it is a new drug and there isn't a lot of people who take it so your response is valuable. I also understand that everyone is different with different medications and conditions.

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@daisymae53

Hi JK,
I am on Omeprezole and Prednisone. I also have been told that I need to take Tymlos. Can I ask how the Tymlos treatment is going for you? I'm a little nervous about the side effects. Did you have any? If so how long? Any suggestions for me would be appreciated. I understand that it is a new drug and there isn't a lot of people who take it so your response is valuable. I also understand that everyone is different with different medications and conditions.

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Hi, @daisymae53 Welcome to Connect!

I am almost done with Tymlos. I will finish at the end of the year or the beginning of 2023 depending on when my pen runs out. That will be 22 or 23 months of Tymlos, a month shorter than the full 24 months. I am doing that because my deductible is huge the first month of the year and my endocrinologist said that getting off a month or two early wouldn't make much difference.

The most common effect seems to be fluid retention in the belly area. I presume it must be a defense response of the body to all of the little injections. The injections are either painless or just a minor twinge. I hope my belly will go down somewhat when I get off of it. The other side effect that seems relatively common is achy muscles and/or joints. I find that comes and goes. For a brief period, it was bothering me a lot but now it is not. Initially I had no side effects, but the achy legs and puffy belly developed over time. A small number of people do have more difficult side effects but then they generally reduce their dosage and increase it as their body adjusts to Tymlos. I asked my endocrinologist if I should start low and she said no, and as it turned out I had no side effects initially so that was the correct way to go.

Many people do find it affects their blood pressure. Mine was slightly high and is not now so perhaps that's due to Tymlos.

I am no longer on either Omeprazole or prednisone. When I realized that Omeprazole could have an effect on your bones due to blocking the absorption of some nutrients I asked to be changed to something else so I am on Famotidine now which is the same as Pepcid AC.

Before you start make an in-person or phone appointment with a clinical advisor about injecting and also go to the Tymlos site and print out the diagram to help you keep track of where you have injected so you are not injecting in the same place all of the time. You can also get a free travel case for the pen with slots for 7 days of needles. If you do travel at all that's very nice to have.
JK

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Tymlos is a hormone treatment that is very effective in preventing spinal fractures by speeding up the building of bone. Caused cancer in lab rats (high doses). I've had success building bone by getting my Vit D up to snuff, following recommendations at saveourbones.com, eating prunes, taking Ca and some strontium. I quit Omparazole then Nexium after I learned about effects of PPIs on the kidney. I find that gargling with 8.8 pH alkaline water helps my throat, which is prone to irritation from GERD resulting from my hiatal hernia. The alkalinity neutralizes pepsin, the enzyme that digests protein and can also digest throat tissue. (I learned of this via a journal article from PubMed.) I also try to finish eating at least 4 hours before bedtime, use Gaviscon Advance aniseed suspension as a stomach block and antacid. My go-to antacid is Life Extension's Esophacool.

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