
Reflux redux Q: I know you don't believe in the drugs prescribed to treat acid reflux. But my husband started taking Zantac several years ago and it has saved him a great deal of suffering ever since. So I'd like to know what, in particular, is so bad about these medications? JVW: Think of acid-blocking treatment like drying up the river after a flood but never repairing the faulty dam that's causing the flooding. Like many of the "wonder drugs" that have become available in this age of pharmaceutical-dominated medicine, neither anti-acid drugs nor traditional neutralizing antacid products do anything to cure the underlying causes of heartburn or GERD. They only temporarily suppress the major symptom -- heartburn. Symptom suppression is the standard treatment strategy for many diseases in conventional Western medicine today. More specifically, though, acid-blocking drugs, by their very nature, cause profound changes in the internal environment of the stomach and intestines. These changes have been associated with a wide range of ailments. Decades of research have demonstrated that chronically low levels of stomach acid can be harmful in the long run, causing poor digestion, which leads to inefficient absorption of nutrients from food, which leads to malnutrition. Besides, the relief anti-acid drugs offer is temporary. Heartburn stays away only as long as acid levels stay suppressed, and acid levels stay suppressed only as long as you keep taking the drugs. If you stop taking them, you risk heartburn's return, sometimes with a vengeance. It's not uncommon for people using Zantac, Prilosec, or even Tums to take them daily for years and years at a time in order to avoid a relapse. Now that many of these drugs are available over-the-counter and are promoted as being equivalent to (in terms of safety and ease of use, at least) and much more effective and longer-lasting than old-fashioned acid neutralizing products, people are even more likely to overuse them. This strategy leaves much to be desired for people with heartburn, but it works great for the pharmaceutical companies. If the drugs actually cured heartburn/GERD, the companies wouldn't make nearly as much money as they do by selling drugs that provide only temporary relief. What is...GERD? GERD stands for gastrointestinal reflux disease. In this condition, the contents of the stomach flow back up into the lower esophagus, causing symptoms of heartburn. If left untreated, GERD can lead to scarring of the esophagus.  |