gastroesophageal reflux disease

February 8, 2011

Home Remedy GERD

If you’re looking for a home remedy for GERD, you may find that there isn’t any one sure fire way to get rid of your specific GERD. There are a lot of different things, and different combinations of things that you can try. That means if one particular thing doesn’t work for you, there are plenty of other things to try.

Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease, or GERD, happens when the muscles that control the flow of food down into the stomach weaken and allow acids to pass up into the stomach. This causes damage and irritation to the esophagus. People that have GERD suffer heartburn in a frequent and chronic way, often experiencing symptoms of heartburn more than twice a week.

Although this can be a debilitating problem that interferes with day to day activities, there are a number of home remedies and simple lifestyle changes that can be implemented to help relieve the symptoms of GERD.

Home Remedies for GERD

There are a few different kinds of tea that have been known to soothe symptoms of GERD. Chamomile and fennel teas can be very effective at calming the effects of GERD.

Additionally eating a handful of almonds a few times a day has been shown to neutralize stomach acids and reduce heartburn associated with GERD.

Ginger is also a very effective way to relieve all types of stomach problems, including heartburn that results from GERD. It can be consumed as tea, most effective as hot or warm tea, or eaten as candied ginger.

You can also try drinking a glass of water if you’re experiencing a particularly bad session of heartburn. Although it may sound too easy, the fluids help to flush your system and dilute any acids that remain behind, thus calming your digestive tract and soothing any irritation therein.

Papaya tablets have also been found to be effective at helping break food down and prevent heartburn as they make the digestion process easier for your body. They can be taken immediately following a meal and should be chewed thoroughly so that your saliva can react with the enzymes that will provide aid to your stomach and keep acids from becoming to prevalent.

Lifestyle Changes for GERD

There are also a number of things you can do to help keep GERD at bay as far as making simple routine changes in your lifestyle.

One of the easiest and most low impact things you can do is to alter your eating habits. Cut back on how much you eat at any one time, and increase the number of times you eat in a day. That way you’re still consuming the same amounts of food, just not all at once. That helps reduce stress on your stomach and digestive system, so that it doesn’t produce too much acid and aggravate your GERD.

Another thing you can do is change when you eat. If you’re in the habit of eating late at night or right before you lie down for a nap, simply stop doing that. Eating right before you go horizontal makes it difficult for your body to keep food and acids in your stomach. If you lie down on an empty stomach, there aren?t any excess acids available to move freely into your esophagus and cause irritation.

For more information on finding the right home remedy for GERD, visit refluxremedy.com today!

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February 7, 2011

GERD and Heartburn

GERD and heartburn tend to go hand in hand, although just because you have heartburn doesn’t mean you have GERD.

Gastroesophageal reflux disease is caused by a weakening of the muscles surrounding the esophagus and diaphragm that keep food flowing in one direction. When these muscles get too weak, food and stomach acids are allowed to flow up into the esophagus where they don’t belong. Prolonged, frequent, or chronic exposure to stomach acids can cause GERD and long term damage to the esophagus.

People who suffer from heartburn more than twice a week are often diagnosed with GERD. Other symptoms of GERD include regurgitation of bile, hiccups, belching and a general feeling of discomfort in the stomach.

Causes of GERD and Heartburn

GERD and heartburn tend to have very different causes. GERD is caused by aging, is a condition you are born with, or can be the result of a recent bad stomach bug that caused prolonged periods of vomiting or straining of stomach muscles.

Heartburn is caused by any number of things, including the food you eat, how much you eat, when you eat, your lifestyle, how much stress you’re feeling, what type of clothes you wear, and whether or not you smoke.

Help for GERD and Heartburn

Because heartburn is often the result of GERD, they can be treated in much the same way. If you have either GERD or heartburn or both, you should avoid foods that spurn heartburn for you. If you don’t know what those foods are, keep a log of what you’re eating and then you’ll be able to look back and point directly to what caused your most recent episode. Then, moving forward you can avoid that food.

You should also modify the amount of food you consume at any one time. GERD complicates the digestive process because of the weakened muscles, so eating less in each sitting makes digestion easier for your body. To compensate for the loss of food, eat more often.

Additionally, work towards de-stressing your life. While day to day activities cause normal amounts of stress, and sometimes it can’t be avoided, due to things like death, breakups, kids, finances, etc., you do have control over the way you respond to certain stress triggers. If you need help learning how to cope with life’s stressors without causing your body harm, consider seeing a therapist. They can help you learn healthy ways to purge stressful reactions from your life. Stress is known to result in too much acid in the stomach, causing heartburn and pain and doesn’t allow GERD to heal at a normal rate, so reducing stress can be extremely beneficial.

Another thing you can try is modifying when you eat. Take strides not to eat right before bed, as that gives food and acids easy access to your esophagus, especially where GERD and the weakened muscles meant to keep food down are involved. Try not to eat less than two hours before you lie down for a nap or get into bed and you should have better luck keeping GERD and its symptoms away.

GERD and heartburn are often closely associated with one another. For more information on these two conditions, how they’re related, and how you can naturally cope with them, visit refluxremedy.com today.

Natural Heartburn Relief

 

 

 

 

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February 1, 2011

Nighttime Heartburn

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say more than 60 million American adults lack quality sleep patterns. This means 60,000,000 people have trouble falling asleep, staying asleep or waking up refreshed.

The main culprits are alcohol, caffeine, nicotine or eating too much before bedtime . . . which, among other factors triggers nighttime heartburn.

Researchers in Oklahoma City studied 81 people who complained of sleep problems and found that 30% of them suffered from nighttime heartburn and didn’t even know it.

In Brazilian study, researchers studied nearly 100 adults who had sleep issues and found people with sleep problems were almost ‘twice as likely’ to suffer chronic nighttime heartburn (a.k.a. acid reflux, acid indigestion, gastroesophageal reflux disease) compared to others without sleeping pattern issues.

Leading health experts agree that eating smaller meals more often is better than eating 1, 2 or 3 large meals a day. Nighttime heartburn is associated with eating large meals, especially before lying down.

If you have to eat late, make sure you’re up doing something for at least 3 hours before bed. If you eat something like a snack, make sure it’s at least an hour and a half before you crash out on the couch, floor or bed.

Nighttime heartburn can be activated by sitting down and eating as well. The proverbial coach potato who eats and watches TV will most likely qualify as one of the 60 million Americans who have sleep disorders and odds are they have nighttime heart burn.

Here’s what to do if you want nighttime heartburn:

  • Eat a big meal shortly before bed
  • Drinking anything but water right before bed
  • Don’t raise your head while sleeping
  • Eat acid forming foods
  • Get a milk or beer belly
  • Smoke tobacco
  • Consume less than 90% vegetables and fruits
  • Mix your carbs and protein together
  • Take antacids that cause acid rebound

Living without nighttime heartburn is a natural step you can take that also carries many other benefits such as living longer, being slimmer and having more vitality and overall health.

You were born to heal,

Todd M. Faass

Health Advocate

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January 12, 2011

Gastric Reflux Disease

Did you know gastric diseases like acid reflux and gastroesophageal reflux disease are completely preventable, reversible and curable?

A problem like gastric reflux disease can’t be healed if you don’t know what it is. Even if there already is a natural cure for it you will still have the problem simply because you don’t know there’s already is a cure.

The real problem with gastrointestinal problems like gastritis reflux disease is the problem of science versus medicine.

Conventional or Westernized medicine claims ONLY pharmaceuticals can prevent, treat or cure gastric reflux disease and if they don’t have a drug for it yet, then, according to them, nothing else can help until they make one.

This contradicts science to the core.

The solution isn’t recognized only because the real problem isn?t recognized.

There is no Eastern or Western medicine, there is just the stubborn refusal to admit that the body/mind and its elaborate healing system is far more complete than any pharmacy could ever be.

Gastric reflux disease is an inflammatory dis-ease . . . it is a symptom of your body’s powerful healing system trying to cope with the alien environment being dumped into it.

Science has proven that all dis-ease has a cause and by removing the cause the dis-ease is eliminated. Medicine insists that drugs should be used to chemically interfere with the symptoms . . . treating only the effects.

This tells me the druggists that are practicing medicine simply don’t know what the problem is . . .

Ignore your gastric reflux disease and you’ll end up taking more powerful drugs that may lead you right to the surgeons table. This is called taking a bad situation and making it worse.

Science simply uses the law of cause and effect. It recognizes the solution already exists, because the body/mind already knows how to restore balance.

Your body /mind will teach this you if you learn to listen . . .

Great health is much more than being drugged to the point that you’re symptoms free. Great health comes from learning to listen and respond to your body/mind signals and symptoms with a helping hand . . .

Your gastric reflux disease is NOT a drug deficiency.

Medicine tends to practice keeping the problem and the solution separated. There seems to be a different solution for every problem, yet upon closer inspection you can see accepting the science of harmony, unity and interrelatedness many effects can arise from a single cause.

The science of healing your gastric reflux disease isn’t concerned about treating the effects . . . only removing the cause.

You were born to heal,

Todd M. Faass

Health Advocate

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