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- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!linus!linus.mitre.org!linus!sdl
- From: sdl@linus.mitre.org (Steven D. Litvintchouk)
- Subject: Re: indigestion
- In-Reply-To: cathy@techbook.com's message of 6 Nov 92 06:17:00 GMT
- Message-ID: <SDL.92Nov13155603@rigel.linus.mitre.org>
- Sender: news@linus.mitre.org (News Service)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: rigel.mitre.org
- Organization: The MITRE Corporation, Bedford, MA
- References: <BxA6sC.Bz2@techbook.com>
- Date: Fri, 13 Nov 1992 20:56:03 GMT
- Lines: 48
-
-
- In article <BxA6sC.Bz2@techbook.com> cathy@techbook.com (Cathy Gaupo) writes:
-
- > I've heard the commercials that if you have indigestion very
- > often, you should see your doctor. My boyfriend suffers a lot from it.
- > Frequently, he has to take alka-setlzer or tums just to calm down the
- > irritation and/or the flem. So my question is what is the problem.
- > I want to show him something about why he should see his doctor.
- > Could someone one fill me in on this?
- > If it's not that serious, should he wait until his next scheduled
- > check-up? Should he make an appointment sooner?
-
- Continual heartburn could be a symptom of an ulcer (or even something
- worse). Does the heartburn occur after eating, or before? If it
- occurs after eating, it might be simple esophageal reflux (stomach
- acid backing up past the sphincter valve). Some people's sphincter
- valves don't close fully. On the other hand, if the heartburn occurs
- when the stomach is empty (say in the middle of the night or early
- morning), then it could well be an ulcer.
-
- Just in case, until your boyfriend does see a doctor, he should avoid
- all products containing aspirin, ibuprofen, Naproxen, etc. These pain
- relievers are known gastric irritants that can cause/exacerbate
- bleeding, in the event there is significant gastrointestinal
- irritation and/or an ulcer present. (But I believe that acetaminophen
- is OK.)
-
- Your boyfriend should tell his doctor that he has been using
- Alka-Seltzer fairly regularly. In which case, the doctor may order
- some tests to determine if there has been any GI blood loss.
-
- Finally, I believe that Tums/Rolaids are known to have significant
- rebound effect. That is, once they wear off, the heartburn can be
- even worse than before. Your boyfriend should consider a liquid
- antacid like Maalox (non-constipating), or Amphogel (non-diarrheal).
-
-
-
- --
- Steven Litvintchouk
- MITRE Corporation
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