What causes Heat Burn?
The cause of GERD is complex. There probably are multiple
causes, and different causes may be operative in different
individuals or even in the same individual at various times.
A small number of patients with GERD produce abnormally large
amounts of acid, but this is uncommon and not a contributing
factor in the vast majority of patients. The factors that
contribute to causing GERD are the lower esophageal sphincter,
hiatal hernias, esophageal contractions, and emptying of the
stomach.
The action of the lower esophageal sphincter
(LES) is perhaps the most important factor (mechanism) for
preventing reflux. The esophagus is a muscular tube that extends
from the lower throat to the stomach. The LES is a specialized
ring of muscle that surrounds the lower-most end of the esophagus
where it joins the stomach. The muscle that makes up the LES
is active most of the time. This means that it is contracting
and closing off the passage from the esophagus into the stomach.
This closing of the passage prevents reflux. When food or
saliva is swallowed, the LES relaxes for a few seconds to
allow the food or saliva to pass from the esophagus into the
stomach, and then it closes again.
Several different abnormalities
of the LES have been found in patients with GERD. Two of them
involve the function of the LES. The first is abnormally weak
contraction of the LES, which reduces its ability to prevent
reflux. The second is abnormal relaxations of the LES, called
transient LES relaxations. They are abnormal in that they
do not accompany swallows and they last for a long time, up
to several minutes. These prolonged relaxations allow reflux
to occur more easily. The transient LES relaxations occur
in patients with GERD most commonly after meals when the stomach
is distended with food. Transient LES relaxations also occur
in individuals without GERD, but they are infrequent.
The most recently-described
abnormality in patients with GERD is laxity of the LES. Specifically,
similar distending pressures open the LES more in patients
with GERD than in individuals without GERD. At least theoretically,
this would allow easier opening of the LES and/or greater
backward flow of acid into the esophagus when the LES is open.
Hiatal hernia
Hiatal hernias contribute to reflux, although the way in which
they contribute is not clear. A majority of patients with
GERD have hiatal hernias, but many do not. Therefore, it is
not necessary to have a hiatal hernia in order to have GERD.
Moreover, many people have hiatal hernias but do not have
GERD. It is not known for certain how or why hiatal hernias
develop.
Normally, the LES is located
at the same level where the esophagus passes from the chest
through the diaphragm and into the abdomen. (The diaphragm
is a muscular, horizontal partition that separates the chest
from the abdomen.) When there is a hiatal hernia, a small
part of the upper stomach that attaches to the esophagus pushes
up through the diaphragm. As a result, a small part of the
stomach and the LES come to lie in the chest, and the LES
is no longer at the level of the diaphragm.
It appears that the diaphragm
that surrounds the LES is important in preventing reflux.
That is, in individuals without hiatal hernias, the diaphragm
surrounding the esophagus is continuously contracted, but
then relaxes with swallows, just like the LES. Note that the
effects of the LES and diaphragm occur at the same location
in patients without hiatal hernias. Therefore, the barrier
to reflux is equal to the sum of the pressures generated by
the LES and the diaphragm. When the LES moves into the chest
with a hiatal hernia, the diaphragm and the LES continue to
exert their pressures and barrier effect. However, they now
do so at different locations. Consequently, the pressures
are no longer additive. Instead, a single, high-pressure barrier
to reflux is replaced by two barriers of lower pressure, and
reflux thus occurs more easily. So, decreasing the pressure
barrier is one way that an hiatal hernia can contribute to
reflux.
There is a second way in which
hiatal hernias might contribute to reflux. When a hiatal hernia
is present, there is a hernial sac, which is a small pouch
of stomach above the diaphragm. The sac is pinched off from
the esophagus above by the LES and from the stomach below
by the diaphragm. What's important about this situation is
that the sac can trap acid that comes from the stomach. This
trap keeps the acid close to the esophagus. As a result, it
is easier for the acid to reflux when the LES relaxes with
a swallow or a transient relaxation.
Finally, there is a third way
in which hiatal hernias might contribute to reflux. The esophagus
normally joins the stomach obliquely, which means not straight
on or at a 90-degree angle. Due to this oblique angle of entry,
a flap of tissue is formed between the stomach and esophagus.
This flap of tissue is believed to act like a valve, shutting
off the esophagus from the stomach and preventing reflux.
When there is a hiatal hernia, the entry of the esophagus
into the stomach is pulled up into the chest. Therefore, the
valve-like flap is distorted or disappears and it no longer
can help prevent reflux.
Esophageal contractions
As previously mentioned, swallows are important in eliminating
acid in the esophagus. Swallowing causes a ring-like wave
of contraction of the esophageal muscles, which narrows the
lumen (inner cavity) of the esophagus. The contraction, referred
to as peristalsis, begins in the upper esophagus and travels
to the lower esophagus. It pushes food, saliva, and whatever
else is in the esophagus into the stomach.
When the wave of contraction
is defective, refluxed acid is not pushed back into the stomach.
In patients with GERD, several abnormalities of contraction
have been described. For example, waves of contraction may
not begin after each swallow or the waves of contraction may
die out before they reach the stomach. Also, the pressure
generated by the contractions may be too weak to push the
acid back into the stomach. Such abnormalities of contraction,
which reduce the clearance of acid from the esophagus, are
found frequently in patients with GERD. In fact, they are
found most frequently in those patients with the most severe
GERD. The effects of abnormal esophageal contractions would
be expected to be worse at night when gravity is not helping
to return refluxed acid to the stomach. Note that smoking
also substantially reduces the clearance of acid from the
esophagus. This effect continues for at least 6 hours after
the last cigarette.
Most reflux during the day occurs after
meals. This reflux probably is due to transient LES relaxations
that are caused by distention of the stomach with food. A
minority of patients with GERD, about 20%, has been found
to have stomachs that empty abnormally slowly after a meal.
The slower emptying of the stomach prolongs the distention
of the stomach with food after meals. Therefore, the slower
emptying prolongs the period of time during which reflux is
more likely to occur.
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