Acid Reflux Diet & Cookbook For Dummies
Book cover for Acid Reflux Diet & Cookbook for Dummies with food items like vegetables and milk.
Explore Book
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Acid Reflux Diet & Cookbook For Dummies
Book cover for Acid Reflux Diet & Cookbook for Dummies with food items like vegetables and milk.Explore Book
Buy NowSubscribe on Perlego

The terms acid reflux, heartburn, and GERD are often used interchangeably, but there is a difference among these three digestive disorders:

  • Acid reflux is the reason you have heartburn. It is the underlying condition that allows stomach acid to escape into the esophagus. Reflux is the result of a malfunctioning lower esophageal sphincter (LES). The LES is a group of muscles that allows food and fluid to pass into the stomach and block any of the stomach contents from getting into the esophagus.

    Acid reflux is not necessarily a chronic condition. Any time your LES malfunctions, you're experiencing reflux. So, even if you get reflux only once a year, you're still considered to have acid reflux.

  • Heartburn is a symptom and not a disease or condition. Heartburn is one of the most common symptoms of acid reflux and gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). It's a burning sensation in the chest that results from the esophagus being exposed to stomach acid.

  • GERD is a chronic condition. Most doctors will diagnose you with GERD if you experience heartburn or other reflux symptoms two or more times a week. Acid reflux may not require treatment, but GERD usually will.

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

Patricia Raymond, MD, FACG, is one of the most respected voices in patient education on digestive health, including acid reflux.

Michelle Beaver is an award-winning journalist. She’s served as editor-in-chief of three national medical magazines, ghostwrote a New York Times best-selling health book, and co-authored Acid Reflux Diet & Cookbook For Dummies and Histamine Response For Dummies. She teaches at Arizona State University’s Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing and is founder and director of News Literacy for Arizona.