- Fried foods
- Spicy foods
- Citrus foods
- Tomato-based foods
- Processed foods
- Alcohol
- Caffeine
- Smoking
- Eating right before bed
- Eating with an already full stomach—which can cause the food to come back up.
- Being overweight and having a big belly—which can push your stomach up, causing reflux.
- Chronic stress affects the nerves in your stomach, making it impossible to process the food properly. This will cause food to go up instead of down. In fact, in order to digest your food well, you have to relax. So, breathing before eating is a very important tool.
- Loss of magnesium, which is caused by stress. Magnesium is needed to relax the sphincter at the bottom of your stomach that actually lets the food go down. When you don’t have enough magnesium, the food goes up.
- Food sensitivities that may not be diagnosed by your average physician, including gluten and dairy.
- Bad bacteria or yeast growing in your stomach. If you have been on a lot of antibiotics, if you have been on hormones, if you eat a lot of sugar and processed food, you could grow bad bugs in your gut, and they ferment and push things around and cause reflux.
- H. Pylori, a bacterium that affects a number of people in our population, can sometimes be linked to reflux.
- Fix your diet. The things that are common and easy to remove are spicy foods, citrus foods, tomato-based foods, and fried foods. Simple.
- Get rid of possible food allergens for a short period of time, like two weeks. Gluten and dairy are the most common ones.
- Try to get rid of the triggers for a few weeks, like alcohol, caffeine, and nicotine, all of which trigger reflux. Not forever, but try it for a little while, and see if it’s causing your problem.
- Change your lifestyle. For example, don’t eat three hours before bed. Give yourself a chance to digest your food.
- Deal with stress before you eat. Try a very simple technique that I call “Take Five.” Take five breaths before each meal. Count in to the count of five, out to the count of five, and breathe deeply. You’ll notice a huge relaxation in your nervous system, and you’ll digest your food better.
- Try specific supplements to help. My favorite is licorice. We call it deglycerized licorice or DGL, which helps to coat the stomach and prevent reflux. You can chew two or three tablets before you eat. I also like to use a glutamine, aloe, and licorice combination that can be taken as a powder, a teaspoon in water, 10 to 15 minutes before you eat. It really coats the stomach lining and helps you digest your food. Try probiotics, like Acidophilus and Bifidobacteria. Also, you can use digestive enzymes that help break down the food. Also, magnesium is a very powerful relaxation mineral for the digestive system that helps prevent reflux. Then, lastly, you can add something called zinc carnosine, which has been shown to help reflux.
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Get tested. If you are still not getting better after taking these steps, then, you’ll want to do some testing, which you can do with your Functional Medicine doctor:
- • Test for H. Pylori
- • Check for celiac and gluten sensitivity
- • Check for food sensitivities
- • Check for abnormal bugs in your gut, bacterial overgrowth, yeast overgrowth, and parasites
- Do you have reflux?
- What have you tried?
- Have you tried the little purple pill? Did you get side effects?
- What have you tried that’s worked?
- Have you figured out the cause of your reflux?