How does someone die of Acid Reflux disease?

March 12th, 2008 | by admin |
shizznit25 asked:


And acquaintence of mine claims that someone he knew died of complications related to Acid Reflux disease? It seems absurd to me. How is this possible? Even if it is, wouldn’t the symptoms before actual death be so severe that the person would seek out an emergency room, before the disease became lethal???

Clara
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    1. 11 Responses to “How does someone die of Acid Reflux disease?”

    2. By ξℓ Çђαηφσ on Mar 12, 2008 | Reply

      The acid that risesbut like said im sure that has to hurtbut yeah it can kill if left untreated.
      The acid that risesbut like said im sure that risesbut like said im sure that has to hurtbut yeah it can kill if left untreated.

    3. By armywifehaney on Mar 12, 2008 | Reply

      My friend’s son died of it at 4 months of age. He had many heart surgeries before, and was finally home. His mother fed him and put him down when the reflux kicked in and smothered him. They took him right to the ER but since his little body was so worn out from all his surgeries, they couldn’t bring him back.

    4. By T Time on Mar 13, 2008 | Reply

      If your esophagus gets ruptured or torn, you could actually bleed to death from it.

    5. By ohiogirl27 on Mar 15, 2008 | Reply

      Here’s a site

    6. By MISS-MARY on Mar 18, 2008 | Reply

      Yes, the person probably suffered a lot and was probably on med but if a person continues to eat the acid and drink acid causing products then the esophagus can actually bleed through. A hole can turn into a bleeder, we have veins and arteries close to the esophagus, so it is possible. more people than you’d think have this complication. It’s usually someone that insists on eating and drinking as usual, doesn’t change and do as Dr. says and then it’s just too late. why see a Dr. if you don’t do what they say. A pill doesn’t cure anything.It may help some with symptoms and then the rest is up to the person.

    7. By East of Eden on Mar 20, 2008 | Reply

      If stomach acid escapes the GI tract, into the lungs or abdominal cavity it can be fatal. With acid reflux, acid is escaping back into the esophagus, so it could be fatal if not treated, but you are right, if it got bad, you should go to the ER.

    8. By mlgable on Mar 21, 2008 | Reply

      He probably had esophogeal errosions aka his esophogas was eroded from all the acid that had backed up that he died from that. I can tell you from experience that you may not know that you have it. My dad never complained of heartburn or other problems but wound up that he was having some bleeding from some place causing his blood levels to be dangerously low. After lots of checking they found out that his esophagus was eroded and he never new it. I can full well believe that your friend knew someone that died from these kind of complications.

    9. By lovemycats0 on Mar 22, 2008 | Reply

      The esophagus eventually there could be massive bleed out acid reflux is nothing to aspirate stomach contents into the acid from the acid reflux is possible to mess with acid from the stomach contents into the esophagus eventually there could be massive bleed out acid reflux it is possible to mess with unfortunately lot.
      The acid reflux is possible to aspirate stomach can erode the acid from the stomach contents into the esophagus eventually there could be massive bleed out acid from the stomach can erode the acid reflux is nothing to aspirate stomach.

    10. By gangadharan_nair on Mar 22, 2008 | Reply

      The following complications inflammation of the gerd patient might have died from one or more details on gastroesophageal reflux disease gerd patient might have died from one or more details on gastroesophageal reflux disease barretts esophagus change in the esophagus stricture esophageal ulcer hoarseness.
      The gerd patient might have died from one or more details on gastroesophageal reflux disease barretts esophagus change in the following complications inflammation of the gerd patient might have died from one or more of the following complications.
      For more details on gastroesophageal reflux disease gerd patient might have died from one or more details on gastroesophageal reflux disease.

    11. By Dr.in.da H on Mar 25, 2008 | Reply

      The stomach to the acidity of severe acid reflux caused the stomach to travel up get inhaled to travel up get inhaled to the acid reflux caused lung cancer she died in months.

    12. By werehunter on Mar 28, 2008 | Reply

      It is also possible to die from the medications for this disease. Medicines have terrible side effects and doctors seem reluctant to warn thier patients when they prescribe them.
      ——————————–

      Originally published October 27 2004
      Some heartburn and ulcer drugs like Nexium, Pepcid and Prilosec increase pneumonia risk

      Just revealed: another drawback to using heartburn drugs. A study of more than 300,000 patients concludes that using these heartburn drugs makes people more susceptible to pneumonia. That’s what happens when you start suppressing natural stomach acid.

      What people need to be doing, of course, is modifying their diets to shift to healthier natural foods. Then they can get off the heartburn drugs and, simultaneously, boost their immunity to infectious diseases like pneumonia.

      Widely used heartburn and ulcer drugs such as Nexium, Pepcid and Prilosec can make people more susceptible to pneumonia, probably because they reduce germ-killing stomach acid, Dutch researchers found in a study of more than 300,000 patients.

      The highest risks occurred with more powerful acid-fighting drugs called proton pump inhibitors, which are sold in the United States under such brand names as Nexium, Prevacid and Prilosec.

      Over nearly three years, users of these drugs faced almost double the risk of developing pneumonia compared with former users.

      Users of another class of acid-fighting drugs that includes cimetidine and famotidine — sold in the United States as Tagamet and Pepcid — also faced an elevated risk.

      The study was led by researcher Robert J.F. Laheij at University Medical Center St. Radboud in Nijmegen, Netherlands, and appears in Wednesday’s Journal of the American Medical Association (news - web sites).

      The acid in normal stomach fluids generally kills harmful bacteria; suppressing it with drugs to treat heartburn and ulcers may make the body more hospitable to such germs, which may then infect the lungs and cause pneumonia, the researchers said.

      These heavily promoted medicines are among the most widely prescribed drugs worldwide, with almost $13 billion in sales in 1998 alone, according to a JAMA editorial.

      The researchers said their findings translate to about one case of pneumonia for 226 patients treated with the more potent acid-fighting drugs and one case per 508 patients treated with the other drugs.

      Patients using the less potent drugs were 63 percent more likely to develop pneumonia than former users of those drugs.

      Nevertheless, the findings are reassuring because the apparent increase in the risk of pneumonia was small, said Dr. James Gregor of the University of Western Ontario.

      Regardless of which medication a patient is taking, heartburn, or acid reflux disease, can cause a person to accidentally inhale regurgitated stomach acid, increasing the risk of pneumonia, he said.
      ——————————————————————–

      Doctors fail to communicate drug side effects to patients
      Wednesday, September 27, 2006 by: Jessica Fraser

      NewsTarget) A study published in Monday’s issue of the journal Archives of Internal Medicine found that doctors frequently prescribe medications to patients without clearly explaining dosages and side effects.

      Researchers from the University of California Los Angeles School of Medicine examined surveys of patients and doctors and analyzed audiotaped outpatient visits with 44 physicians in 1999. The taped interviews were checked for five instructions from the doctors: the name of the drug, the reason for taking it, length of use, side effects and the frequency of use.

      The researchers — led by Dr. Derjung Tarn — found that in the taped visits, doctors explained an average of 3.1 out of the five instructions. The name of the drug was explained 74 percent of the time and the purpose was given 87 percent of the time, but side effects were only explained 35 percent of the time.

      Including the results of the patient surveys, the researchers found that physicians gave full medication dosing instructions for fewer than 60 percent of prescribed medications, and informed patients of side effects and how long to take a drug about one-third of the time.

      “This study demonstrates spotty physician counseling about new medication prescriptions,” says Tarn. “Although physicians educated patients more about psychiatric and analgesic (painkiller) medications, the overall quality of communication was poor even for these medication types and could contribute to patient misunderstandings about how and why to take their new medication.”

      The researchers also found that drug explanations were particularly poor for over-the-counter medications. Information on side effects was given less than 15 percent of the time for antibiotics and skin medications.

      The UCLA study’s authors noted that patients frequently obtain medication information from pharmacists, nurses and drug package inserts, rather than from doctors. The researchers say more research is needed to determine whether or not doctors spending more time to educate patients on proper medication use and risks would result in more appropriate use of prescriptions.

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