GERD — what a funny-sounding word that rhymes with nerd!
But GERD isn't exactly funny. Its letters stand for gastroesophageal (say: gas-troh-ih-sa-fuh-jee-ul) reflux (say: ree-fluks) disease. You can't catch GERD from someone else, but it's a fairly common disease. In fact, millions of kids and adults have this problem. Chances are that you know someone who has GERD.
What Is GERD?
Let's talk about eating for a moment. Chewed-up food slides down the esophagus (say: ih-sah-fuh-gus), or swallowing tube, and into the stomach. There, acidic digestive juices begin to break down the food.
A special type of muscle called a sphincter (say: sfink-ter) connects the esophagus and the stomach. The sphincter works like a gate. It opens up so food can get into the stomach, and then it closes again. This keeps the food and acidic stomach juices from flowing back into the esophagus.
However, if the sphincter opens at the wrong time, there's a problem. Whatever's in the stomach goes the wrong way, which is back up into the esophagus. This is called reflux.
Putting it all together, then, gastroesophageal refers to the stomach ("gastro" means stomach) and esophagus. Reflux means to flow back or return. So gastroesophageal reflux is when the stomach's contents flow back up into the esophagus.
Just about everyone has gastroesophageal reflux once in a while. Many people don't even feel it happening. Other people might feel something commonly known as heartburn. Heartburn describes an uncomfortable burning feeling behind the breastbone.
Heartburn has nothing to do with the heart, but everything to do with your stomach and esophagus. When stuff from the stomach goes back up into the esophagus, the esophagus can become irritated because what's in the stomach is high in acid. That's what causes the burning feeling.
Heartburn commonly happens after a meal, like eating too much at Thanksgiving, having extra-spicy salsa, or wolfing down some pepperoni pizza right before bed.
Many people, even newborn babies, have this problem so often or so severely that it becomes a disease. It's no longer just reflux. Now it's GERD.