If you're already that deep into conventional medicine, you've already been
on acid blockers and steroids and antibiotics.
Not exact matches
«Applying a
blocker might help to reduce the negative effects
on the human heart that are caused by medium - chain fatty
acids, especially in patients with increased fatty
acid levels in blood,» concludes Hatt.
: We have no idea what's going
on but here's some
acid blockers I was never talked to about the root cause ever.
So uh — hypochlorydia, these are the people been popping tums because they've got heartburn but in reality they could have something like H. pylori infection or they've been
on prescription
acid blockers which are very, very, very, very common.
So if you've gone to your conventional doctor or even the gastroenterologist, the specialist you're gonna get referred to that's gonna throw you
on prescription
acid blockers, if they run tests
on you and how up negative, don't necessarily take their word for it.
People may have this idea from the mainstream media ---- I just a commercial the other day that still makes me gag about Zantac and all these other Nexium and all these companies competing
on who has the best
acid blocker and 99.9 — and correct me if I'm wrong — 99.9 % of the time, the issue is too low stomach
acid and not too much and people that have like a faulty lower esophageal sphincter from stress or whatever, that could actually cause some of that
acid to sneak back up into the esophagus where you don't want it to, but if we have the HCl levels optimized, that could prevent some of that stuff from happening.
However, anecdotal evidence suggests
acid blockers such as omeprazole have positive effects
on controlling the nausea, vomiting and anorexia associated with CKD.