Acid reflux

Symptom

Important Notes

  • Building up hydrochloric acid doesn't mean taking HCl capsules or pills - need to build it back up naturally.
  • Taking antibiotics for H. pylori often creates more bacteria and worse acid reflux for the next 10 years.
  • Stagnant sluggish liver: A stagnant sluggish liver causes acid reflux
  • Apple cider vinegar: Acetic acid in all vinegars including apple cider vinegar destroys gastric glands
  • Bacteria acid: Bacteria in intestinal tract produces acid that creeps up into stomach and esophagus
  • Bacterial acid production: Bacteria in the stomach produce acids that mimic gastric acid but are not true hydrochloric acid. These acids cause the burning sensation.
  • Bacteria: Bacteria in your intestinal tract producing acid - this bad acid creeps up into the stomach, eventually into the esophagus
  • Pathogenic bacteria: Bad bacteria multiplying in small intestinal tract creates bad acids responsible for GERD and other forms of acid reflux
  • Bacteria: Bugs that get behind acid reflux causing stomach problems
  • Bacteria: Buildup of bacteria creating acids - H pylori building up, Strepococcus building up
  • Apple cider vinegar: Can either help or cause acid reflux - gives some people really bad acid reflux, makes them throw up
  • Coffee: Coffee destroys gastric glands over time when consumed for years
  • E. coli bacteria: E. coli bacteria causes acid reflux
  • Elevated bacteria: Elevated bacteria in the gut producing acid
  • Gallbladder issues: Gallbladder spewing out problematic substances
  • Emotional trauma: Great loss and emotional struggle can trigger acid reflux
  • H. pylori bacteria: H. pylori can cause acid reflux but is very elusive and escapes tests all the time. It's an interesting critter that produces acids.
  • Bad bacteria: H. pylori, E. coli, strep, C. diff, staph producing acids and mucus in intestinal tract
  • H. pylori and leafy green depletion: H. pylori, E. coli, Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, and C. difficile cause inflammation, scar tissue, and stomach ulcers. These bacteria are responsible for acid reflux when allowed to proliferate due to low HCl. Leafy greens help reduce these bacteria and restore HCl.
  • Hiatal hernia: High hiatal hernias can cause non-bacterial-related acid reflux.
  • Bacterial acids: Hydrochloric acid blend is gone, replaced by bad acids produced by bacteria and viruses
  • Low hydrochloric acid: Low HCl production from damaged stomach glands
  • Low hydrochloric acid: Often related to low hydrochloric acid levels in the stomach
  • Liver burden: Overburdened liver from too much animal fat forces liver to produce extra bile salts, weakening the liver and forcing stomach to overproduce HCl, exhausting the stomach's ability to produce proper acids.
  • Ammonia gas from putrefaction: Putrefied protein and rancid fat in the gut — especially from high-animal-protein dinners — produce ammonia gas and bad acids. These creep up the esophagus at night when lying down, causing acid reflux, bad breath, and dental enamel erosion. The acids traveling at night are NOT hydrochloric acid — they are pathogenic acids and ammonia produced by unproductive bacteria fermenting undigested food.
  • Stagnant liver: Stagnant sluggish liver spewing out toxins
  • Liver problems: Stagnant, sluggish, overburdened, fatty or pre-fatty liver can lead to acid reflux
  • Staph bacteria: Staph bacteria causes acid reflux
  • SIBO (streptococcus): Strep in the small intestinal tract can create a lot of acid that spews up into duodenum and pushes into the stomach.
  • Streptococcus bacteria: Streptococcus bacteria causes acid reflux
  • Bacteria in stomach well: There's a little well at the bottom of the stomach pouch where bacteria loves to grow, especially with weak hydrochloric acid. Bacteria spawns there and creates ugly mutant foreign acid.
  • Weak gastric glands: Weakened hydrochloric acid production from stress, high-fat diets, coffee, and vinegar destroying gastric glands
  • Gastric gland exhaustion: When stomach glands get tired and produce less HCL, acid reflux can develop
  • Weakened stomach glands: When stomach glands that produce gastric acid (HCl) are weak or depleted, acid reflux occurs
  • Hydrochloric acid deficiency: When you have bacterial-produced acid reflux, it means you have no or very little hydrochloric acid left. If you had enough HCl, it would destroy the bacteria causing the reflux.

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