Guest guest Posted December 7, 2006 Report Share Posted December 7, 2006 Does anyone have some documentation regarding Nexium......a friend of mine takes it twice a day and I tell him it is absolutely the wrong thing to do but he won't listen. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2006 Report Share Posted December 7, 2006 Nexium - very scary drug! It kills the acid in your stomach - and our bodies NEED acid in our stomach to digest the food. So he's going to end up with more problems than he has now by taking the Nexium. He will end up with a lot of digestive problems because the food is going through without being digested. Acid in the stomach is also there because it kills pathogens - the bacteria that causes pneumonia. So if there's no more acid to kill off the bad bacteria in your stomach, it will find its way back up into the lungs and possibly cause pneumonia. People that take acid blockers have a greater chance of getting pneumonia. There's a product that I use occasionally for heartburn - called " Contain " - it doesn't do anything to the acid in your stomach - it puts a gel barrier on the top of the contents of your stomach and keeps it down there while the acid does its work and digests the food - http://tinyurl.com/h2al Here's an article I have about foods and heartburn. I think I have another one I'll send in another email. Carol YOUR FOOD ARSENAL FOR HEARTBURN by Susan Rutter - author, publisher, nutritionist, and instructor The burning discomfort of heartburn, or acid reflux, is familiar to many people on a daily basis. Heartburn is usually triggered by eating and occurs when stomach acid washes up into the digestive tube (esophagus), burning the back of the throat. The fiery pain may radiate across the chest, traveling from behind the breastbone to the neck. Belching, flatulence, or nausea may accompany acid reflux, and the burning distress may last from one to four hours. Recurring indigestion (occurring at least twice a week) is medically termed gastroesophageal reflux disease, or GERD, and may be quite severe. Symptoms include painful heartburn, increase salivation, a chronic hoarse voice, and regurgitation. Left untreated, corrosive stomach acid may gradually erode the delicate lining of the esophagus, a process that is linked to esophageal cancer. Fortunately, consuming healing foods and altering eating habits can help quell fiery heartburn. What Causes It? A muscular valve at the bottom of the esophagus, the lower esophageal sphincter (LES), serves as a gatekeeper to the stomach and seals off its contents, blocking backwash into the esophagus. Numerous factors, however, may weaken the LES, or cause it to relax, resulting in heartburn. (Hiatal hernia is another cause of GERD). Smoking and excess abdominal pressure from pregnancy or obesity may weaken the LES, preventing this valve from closing tightly. Certain foods and medications may relax and open the LES, allowing stomach acid to splash into the esophagus. Additional heartburn triggers include acidic foods (tomatoes and citrus fruits and juices), which may promote excess stomach acid and irritate a damaged esophageal lining; and overeating, tight-fitting clothes, and lying down or bending over after eating, all of which may push stomach contents upward. Several dietary changes are recommended to help prevent heartburn flare-ups and to minimize irritation to the esophagus. Though scientific data are scant, simple alterations to eating habits, such as eliminating trigger foods, may prevent reflux. Common heartburn triggers include coffee (both decaffeinated and regular), alcohol, peppermint, chocolate, onions, and tomato products. If irritating foods and beverages must be part of the menu, eat them in very small portions. Drink beverages between meals, instead of with them, to suppress reflux. In addition, remain upright for up to an hour after eating and don't eat for two to three hours before going to bed. Many experts recommend eating small, low-fat meals each day. Large meals distend the stomach, increasing the chance of reflux. Smaller portions, consumed more frequently throughout the day, may be easier to digest, preventing heartburn distress. Eating slowly is important as well, because eating too fast (and too much) can overload the LES muscle, pressuring the valve to open and propel acidic juices into the esophagus. A low-fat diet is thought to prevent heartburn, since high-fat foods may exacerbate acid reflux by prolonging digestion and weakening the LES valve. Some experts believe soothing, mild ginger tea may help protect against heartburn. Though quite spicy on its own, ginger is thought to strengthen the LES valve, preventing acid backwash into the esophagus. Studies have linked obesity with an increase incidence of heartburn, so maintaining a healthy weight is important for heartburn prevention. Too much weight around the abdomen appears to stress the LES valve, allowing stomach contents to seep out. Fiber-rich foods may assist weight loss by improving feelings of fullness without encouraging over-indulgence in extra calories. Eating a diet rich in high-fiber complex carbohydrates may ease digestion and help prevent heartburn. Experts suggest centering meals around such low-fat complex carbohydrates as beans, vegetables, and whole grains. , bungalojil wrote: > > Does anyone have some documentation regarding Nexium......a friend of mine > takes it twice a day and I tell him it is absolutely the wrong thing to do but > he won't listen. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2006 Report Share Posted December 7, 2006 Antacids-Acid Blockers: Do They Help You or Kill You? by David Gawain - Certified Nutritional Microscopist A study published in the October 27, 2004 edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association found that the use of certain drugs that suppress stomach acid production was associated with an increased risk of pneumonia. Specifically, taking proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) such as Nexium and Prilosec was associated with a four times higher incidence of pneumonia. In addition, those taking certain H2 blockers also had an increased risk. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ JAMA. 2004 Oct 27;292(16):1955-60. Risk of community-acquired pneumonia and use of gastric acid-suppressive drugs. Laheij RJ, Sturkenboom MC, Hassing RJ, Dieleman J, Stricker BH, Jansen JB. Department of Gastroenterology, University Medical Center St. Radboud, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. R.Laheij CONTEXT: Reduction of gastric acid secretion by acid-suppressive therapy allows pathogen colonization from the upper gastrointestinal tract. The bacteria and viruses in the contaminated stomach have been identified as species from the oral cavity. OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between the use of acid-suppressive drugs and occurrence of community-acquired pneumonia. CONCLUSION: Current use of gastric acid-suppressive therapy was associated with an increased risk of community-acquired pneumonia. Read entire report here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve & db=pubmed & dopt=Abstra\ ct & list_uids=15507580 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Did you know that most infective organisms enter your body through your mouth. Our stomach acid, besides being part of a critical step of the digestive process, also acts to disinfect the stomach contents and kill most of the bacteria, viruses, or fungal organisms that enter the stomach. The loss of this very important function leads to a higher rate of infection. Our stomach acid is essential to our digestive process and forms a critical part of the overall immunity of our body to infectious disease. Stomach acid has somehow come to be viewed, by the majority of the clinical medical profession and the public as well, as being undesirable. We're now accustomed to treating the condition referred to as indigestion by administering some compound or drug that reduces stomach acid. Stomach acid does not cause stomach ulcers. The truth is recent research has shown that the principal cause of stomach ulcers is a bacterium called H. pylori which infects the stomach lining. In spite of this knowledge, it is a very widely held misconception that stomach ulcers are caused by stomach acid. In recent times, the main compounds that have been used to reduce stomach distress has been simply alkalizers that react with the stomach acid and neutralize it. However, late in the 1970s, pharmaceutical researchers found a way to interfere with the fundamental mechanism that the body uses to make and secrete acid. This development resulted in the production of four new drugs, which became widely and erroneously hailed as ultra cures. In reality, these four drugs - Tagamet, Zantac, Pepcid, and Aczid - are like so many drug approaches -- treat only the symptoms and not the causes of the disease. Moreover, the worse fears about the infective consequences of cutting off the supply of hydrochloric acid with these drugs have been confirmed. In numerous research studies, these acid blocker drugs have been shown to cause bacterial overgrowth in the stomach, an increase in the risk of stomach cancer, an increase in pneumonia infections in hospitals, and sometimes fatal shock syndrome in hospitalized patients. I am referring to studies published in peer review medical research. In 1980, the British Medical Journal Lancet, published an article entitled " Effect of Cimetidine on the Gastric Bacterial Flora " . Cimetidine is the generic name for the drug Tagamet. In that article it was shown conclusively that this drug caused bacterial overgrowth in the stomach. In 1982, a similar study was published in the magazine Infection and Immunity called " The Effect of Cimetidine and Antacid on Gastric Microbial Flora. " In that study, it showed again that the administration of this drug allows undesirable bacteria to grow in the stomach. In other words, antacids and acid blockers turn the stomach into a fermenting tank for disease-causing bacteria. In 1987, in the New England Journal of Medicine, a prestigious U.S. publication, a major study was published entitled " Nosocomial Pneumonia in Incubated Patients Given Sucralfate as Compared with Antacid or Histamine Type Tube Blockers " . Nosocomial is a word that means " caused in the hospital " . In this context it means that the patient came in without an infection but got one while in the hospital. Antacids or the acid blocker drugs were tracked down as the cause of a large number of the cases of pneumonia that developed in the hospital. Several other studies show the connection between infections and acid blockers. In 1992, a publication of a study in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases was entitled " Septisemia and Shock Syndrome Due to Veridan Streptococci: A Case Controlled Study " . Veridan Streptococci are organisms that are well known to dentists. Streptococci are the most commonly occurring bacteria in the mouth and are generally not believed to carry any threat of infection. This research showed that if you are taking these acid blocker drugs so that this organism which is normally in your mouth isn't disinfected by the stomach acid, you get an infection from it. In fact, you get what is called " shock syndrome " . The symptoms are body rashes, altered heart rates, and very frequently " death " . I don't know about you, but I don't consider " death " to be a symptom. In light of all the research I've just cited, showing the really serious life threatening effects of the administration of these type of drugs, why do you suppose the drugs are still on the market? Why hasn't somebody sounded the alarm? I am sounding the alarm! I can not tell you why nobody has drawn attention to these effects before this time. All I can say is that there are a lot of powerful economic forces behind these drugs. These drugs - Zantac, Tagamet, Pepcid, and Aczid - were administered only on a prescription basis up until 1995. That was the year that the patents began to run out on these drugs. So, in order to maintain their market share, the drug companies had no choice but to put these drugs on an over-the-counter basis. So they requested that the FDA allow them to do that and the FDA consented. So, the situation we find ourselves in now is that anyone can go to a drug store and purchase one of these drugs that will shut off the acid in the stomach and thereby remove a major barrier to infection. This can be done by anybody whether or not they happen to be in a high risk group to infection or not. And usually people are not even aware of their risk to infection. Let's discuss some conclusion we can make and some steps we can take. In spite of the grim outlook for the health of our world, there are some very positive steps that you can take on an individual level to improve your ability to resist infectious disease. We have one very powerful resource available to us - " Our own Natural Immune Defenses " . Here are some concrete steps that are recommended to maximize your natural ability to withstand the threat of infectious disease. Step 1 - Use antibiotics wisely and VERY sparingly. If your doctor prescribes an antibiotic, it's your right and responsibility to have a discussion with him to satisfy yourself that you really do have an infection, that the bacteria has been correctly identified, and the antibiotic is the right one to kill that bacteria. Once you are sure that the antibiotic is correct, follow the instructions exactly. One of the biggest mistakes people make with antibiotics is that they stop taking them as soon as they start to feel better, rather than completing the course of therapy. Remember that antibiotics don't have any effect on viruses or fungi. In fact, they frequently make those infections much worse. Step 2 - Do not use acid blockers or antacids. Stomach acid is critical to both digestion and to immunity. This is a vital function to the body that must be preserved. Step 3 - Use friendly bacteria supplements. The friendly bacteria that guard the intestine from colonization by infective bacteria are very frequently depleted by all kinds of lifestyle factors including stress - just everyday stress. Stress of your job, stress of getting through traffic, etc. Whatever the stress, it has been shown that it reduces the friendly bacteria content in your intestine. Also, another factor that is very widespread in usage is carbonated beverages. They tend to kill off and deplete our friendly bacteria. Chlorinated water is another destructive force for our friendly bacteria. Many of the preservatives that are in food and some of the chemicals that are in our food supply also destroy a lot of friendly bacteria. Antibiotics indiscriminately kill bacteria. Antibiotics kill our friendly bacteria sometimes even more efficiently than the infective organism. It's very important that the population of our friendly bacteria be kept at all times at optimum levels to prevent infections from gaining a foothold. Step 4 - Use a plant-based enzyme supplement each time you eat. The fundamental cause of most digestive distress is not too much hydrochloric acid. It is in fact an incomplete status of the digestive process. In other words, the food doesn't get completely digested. The distress of digestion can be reduced either by shutting down the digestive process --- and this is what you happens when you take antacids or acid blockers --- or by completing the digestive process. You can complete the digestive process by having enough enzymes. Plant-based enzymes reduce the occurrence of digestive dysfunction's like heartburn, gas, and other food-related events, including food allergies. Step 5 - Pass this message along to others. Immunity disease is a very personal matter, but in a sense we are globally interdependent. Every life form, is a host for infective organisms. On a grand scale, it's the sum of the immune defenses of all creatures that will restore a healthy harmonious balance and allow us to coexist with the world of microorganisms. My heartfelt wish is that you have complete success in your own action plan to build your own immune defenses. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> END OF ARTICLE <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< We keep hearing more and more about the problems with heavy reliance on medication - the drugs people take on a daily basis year in/year out - to manage symptoms: The problems with hormone replacement therapy, problems with antidepressants and suicide risk, the Vioxx mess, Meridia, Crestor, Accutane, Bextra, Serevent, and now this problem with chronic use of acid-suppression therapy. Gastric acid is important in protecting us against infectious microbes. When people block stomach acid production, it knocks out the system that our body uses to destroy pathogen bacteria in the stomach, and the bacteria comes back up and makes their way down into the lungs. Are these bacteria smart? Not really. Are the heartburn drug developers? For sure! Without an acidic environment in your stomach, you'd never be able to properly digest your food. Stomach acid kills germs that cause infections like pneumonia. Suppressing acid to prevent heartburn and ulcers is not only ineffective for many people, but also makes the body more hospitable to the infectious microorganisms. " Gastric acid is an important barrier against pathogen invasion through the gastrointestinal tract " , the JAMA study finds. Keep the acid in your stomach to kill the pneumonia-causing germs. People are starting to realize there is a downside to all this symptom suppression. Our healthy alternative for occasional heartburn and acid reflux, " Contain " , might be attractive to people who are concerned about respiratory infections, and are wondering what they can take for their occasional gastroesophageal reflux. To get more to the root of the problem, consider eliminating/adding certain foods, and use our plant-based enzymes (E-12 Enzymes) and probiotics (Acidophilus and Bifidus) on a daily basis. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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