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Avoiding food 2 to 3 hours before bed may also help. Your
health care provider may recommend raising the head of your
child’s bed with wood blocks secured under the bedposts. Just
using extra pillows will not help. If these changes do not
work, your health care provider may prescribe medicine for your
child. In rare cases, a child may need surgery. For information
about GER in infants, children, and adolescents, see
the
Gastroesophageal Reflux in Infants and
Gastroesophageal Reflux in Children and
Adolescents fact sheets from the
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
Diseases (NIDDK).
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How is GERD treated?
See your health care provider if you have had symptoms of GERD
and have been using antacids or other over-the-counter reflux
medications for more than 2 weeks. Your health care provider
may refer you to a gastroenterologist, a doctor who treats
diseases of the stomach and intestines. Depending on the
severity of your GERD, treatment may involve one or more of the
following lifestyle changes, medications, or surgery.
Lifestyle Changes
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If you smoke, stop.
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Avoid foods and beverages that worsen symptoms.
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Lose weight if needed.
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Eat small, frequent meals.
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Wear loose-fitting clothes.
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Avoid lying down for 3 hours after a meal.
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Raise the head of your bed 6 to 8 inches by securing wood
blocks under the bedposts. Just using extra pillows will
not help.
Medications
Your health care provider may recommend over-the-counter
antacids or medications that stop acid production or help the
muscles that empty your stomach. You can buy many of these
medications without a prescription. However, see your health
care provider before starting or adding a medication.
Antacids, such as Alka-Seltzer,
Maalox, Mylanta, Rolaids, and Riopan, are usually the first
drugs recommended to relieve heartburn and other mild GERD
symptoms. Many brands on the market use different combinations
of three basic salts-magnesium, calcium, and aluminum-with
hydroxide or bicarbonate ions to neutralize the acid in your
stomach. Antacids, however, can have side effects. Magnesium
salt can lead to diarrhea, and aluminum salt may cause
constipation. Aluminum and magnesium salts are often combined
in a single product to balance these effects.
Calcium carbonate antacids, such as Tums, Titralac, and Alka-2,
can also be a supplemental source of calcium. They can cause
constipation as well.
Foaming agents, such as Gaviscon, work by
covering your stomach contents with foam to prevent reflux.
H2 blockers, such as cimetidine
(Tagamet HB), famotidine (Pepcid AC), nizatidine (Axid AR), and
ranitidine (Zantac 75), decrease acid production. They are
available in prescription strength and over-the-counter
strength. These drugs provide short-term relief and are
effective for about half of those who have GERD symptoms.
Proton pump inhibitors include omeprazole
(Prilosec, Zegerid), lansoprazole (Prevacid), pantoprazole
(Protonix), rabeprazole (Aciphex), and esomeprazole (Nexium),
which are available by prescription. Prilosec is also available
in over-the-counter strength. Proton pump inhibitors are more
effective than H2 blockers and can relieve symptoms and heal
the esophageal lining in almost everyone who has GERD.
Prokinetics help strengthen the LES
and make the stomach empty faster. This group includes
bethanechol (Urecholine) and metoclopramide (Reglan).
Metoclopramide also improves muscle action in the digestive
tract. Prokinetics have frequent side effects that limit their
usefulness-fatigue, sleepiness, depression, anxiety, and
problems with physical movement.
Because drugs work in different ways, combinations of
medications may help control symptoms. People who get heartburn
after eating may take both antacids and H2 blockers. The
antacids work first to neutralize the acid in the stomach, and
then the H2 blockers act on acid production. By the time the
antacid stops working, the H2 blocker will have stopped acid
production. Your health care provider is the best source of
information about how to use medications for GERD.
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What if GERD symptoms persist?
If your symptoms do not improve with lifestyle changes or
medications, you may need additional tests.
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Barium swallow
radiograph uses x rays to
help spot abnormalities such as a hiatal hernia and
other structural or anatomical problems of the
esophagus. With this test, you drink a solution and
then x rays are taken. The test will not detect mild
irritation, although strictures-narrowing of the
esophagus-and ulcers can be observed.
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Upper endoscopy
is
more accurate than a barium swallow radiograph
and may be performed in a hospital or a doctor’s
office. The doctor may spray your throat to numb
it and then, after lightly sedating you, will
slide a thin, flexible plastic tube with a light
and lens on the end called an endoscope down your
throat. Acting as a tiny camera, the endoscope
allows the doctor to see the surface of the
esophagus and search for abnormalities. If you
have had moderate to severe symptoms and this
procedure reveals injury to the esophagus,
usually no other tests are needed to confirm
GERD.
The doctor also may perform a biopsy. Tiny tweezers,
called forceps, are passed through the endoscope and
allow the doctor to remove small pieces of tissue from
your esophagus. The tissue is then viewed with a
microscope to look for damage caused by acid reflux and
to rule out other problems if infection or abnormal
growths are not found.
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pH monitoring
examination involves the
doctor either inserting a small tube into the esophagus
or clipping a tiny device to the esophagus that will
stay there for 24 to 48 hours. While you go about your
normal activities, the device measures when and how
much acid comes up into your esophagus. This test can
be useful if combined with a carefully completed
diary-recording when, what, and amounts the person
eats-which allows the doctor to see correlations
between symptoms and reflux episodes. The procedure is
sometimes helpful in detecting whether respiratory
symptoms, including wheezing and coughing, are
triggered by reflux.
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