Acid Reflux Symptoms

Recurrent heartburn, when properly defined, is the hallmark of Acid Reflux Disease and enables the diagnosis to be made by the history alone. The heartburn associated with Acid Reflux Disease typically occurs once or twice per day and lasts from a few minutes to an hour or more if untreated. This pattern recurs, but with considerable variation in frequency and severity. However, neither the frequency, severity, nor duration of heartburn predicts disease severity on endoscopy. Acid Reflux Disease can also be associated with dysphagia, an alarm symptom because it raises concern for the presence of a peptic stricture or adenocarcinoma arising in Barrett's esophagus. For this reason, dysphagia is an indication for early endoscopy.

The damage in Acid Reflux Disease is best assessed by upper endoscopy and esophageal biopsy. Endoscopy may reveal friability, erosions, ulcers, strictures, or Barrett's esophagus in a third of subjects. In the other two thirds, endoscopic findings are normal but esophageal biopsy may show basal cell hyperplasia, elongation of the rete pegs, inflammatory cell infiltrates, cell edema, dilated intercellular spaces in squamous epithelium, or any combination of these findings. “Dilated intercellular spaces” is the earliest detectable lesion in NERD and correlates with heartburn because it reflects “leakiness” of the paracellular pathway to refluxed gastric acid. A barium swallow or upper gastrointestinal series may also detect ulcers, strictures, and hiatal hernias, but it does not reliably detect inflammation, erosions, or Barrett's esophagus.

Although Acid Reflux Disease is often used synonymously with reflux damage to the esophagus, Acid Reflux Disease includes reflux damage to the oropharynx, larynx, and respiratory tract. Consequently, symptoms and signs of Acid Reflux Disease can include sore throat/pharyngitis, earache/otitis, eroded tooth enamel, hoarseness/laryngitis, bronchitis/chronic cough, asthma/wheezing, and aspiration pneumonia. With the exception of pneumonia, which occurs as a result of gross regurgitation and aspiration of mixed gastric content, damage to the oropharynx, larynx, and airways is mediated by refluxed gastric acid. Asthma (wheezing) and bronchitis (chronic cough) can be triggered either directly by contact of acid with airway epithelium (microaspiration) or indirectly through an esophagopulmonary vagal reflex initiated by contact of acid with esophageal epithelium. The frequency with which Acid Reflux Disease causes, as opposed to being caused by, wheezing/asthma, chronic cough/bronchitis, and hoarseness/laryngitis is unknown.

Associated Conditions
Acid Reflux Disease can develop as a consequence of other conditions, such as Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, scleroderma, diabetes mellitus, nasogastric intubation, and pregnancy.

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