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January 19, 2012 at 1:00 am

Moderate diet to address throat's version of heartburn

Dear Dr. Donohue: I have recently been diagnosed with LPR, laryngopharyngeal reflux. Can you explain it and what the prognosis is?

E.M.

Dear E.M.: Laryngopharyngeal (luh-RING-oh-fair-in-GEE-ul) reflux is the throat version of heartburn. It's the upward splashing of stomach acid and digestive juices into the throat (pharynx) and voice box (larynx). The result is a strained voice or hoarseness, sometimes with difficulty swallowing and a cough. The diagnosis is made by what the patient says his or her symptoms are along with a scope inspection of the throat and vocal cords.

Surprisingly, only a minority, around a third, of these patients actually suffer heartburn symptoms.

Dietary treatment is important. Avoid both caffeinated and decaffeinated beverages, carbonated beverages such as soft drinks, and alcohol. You ought to cross off chocolate, peppermint, citrus fruits, tomatoes, jams, jellies, and salad dressings from your diet. Don't eat spicy foods or drinks.

Smaller but more frequent meals lessen the chances that stomach acid will find its way into the throat. Raising the head of the bed by putting 6-inch blocks under the bedposts keeps stomach juices in the stomach during the night.

Treating this disorder with medicines that suppress acid production is debatable. Such treatment is encouraged, if the person also has heartburn. Medicines also are useful if symptoms are intolerable. By medicines, I'm talking about drugs such as Prilosec (omeprazole), Prevacid (lansoprazole) and Nexium (esomeprazole).

The prognosis is good.

Dear Dr. Donohue: I have been diagnosed with atrial flutter. My cardiologist wants to perform a catheter ablation on me and says it's a safe procedure. Do you agree?

B.L.

Dear B.L.: Atrial flutter is a very rapid heartbeat. The atria, the two upper heart chambers, beat 260 to 300 times a minute. The lower heart chambers, the right and left ventricles, the heart's pumping chambers, beat at half that rate, still a fast heartbeat.

Atrial flutter differs from atrial fibrillation, a more common heart-rhythm disturbance, in the regularity of the heartbeat. Atrial fibrillation is both an irregular and fast heartbeat. Atrial flutter is a regular and fast beat.

Fatigue, lightheadedness and shortness of breath are some of atrial flutter's symptoms.

The heart can't be allowed to sustain such rapid beating. Ablation, the destruction of heart tissue responsible for the speedup, is an excellent way to put an end to flutter. The heart doctor with a specially equipped catheter advances this thin, pliable tube from a surface blood vessel into the heart. When the doctor has the catheter at the right position, he or she turns on radio waves that create scars in the renegade part of the atrium. The abnormal rhythm stops. The success rate is 90 percent. I wouldn't hesitate a minute to have it done.

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