By now in this series of digestive domino track posts, you’re likely getting the idea. One thing triggers the next, and if you have symptoms in one area, you not only have to look back upstream to understand where things might have gone off course, but you also have to look downstream to understand how that could impact what’s going on throughout the rest of your digestive system.
Say it with me – nothing in the digestive system happens in isolation!
For this edition of our digestive deep dive, we’re starting to get into the good stuff. And when I say the good stuff, I mean we’re really uncovering the sites of dysfunction that are the most common drivers of your pesky digestive symptoms.
So for all my people out there with acid reflux, indigestion, GERD, or with a history of ulcers, this one’s for you. If your digestive symptoms lie further down – bloating, constipation, diarrhea, etc. – this is also for you because… well, see paragraph one! 😉
What Does the Stomach Do?
Your stomach, that pouch nestled snugly in your abdomen, is responsible for churning, mixing, and smashing up your food into a concoction called chyme. This allows your food to reach the point of being nearly fully digested by the time it moves into the small intestine, which is the next domino in the track. The stomach facilitates this chemical digestion with the help of digestive juices – enzymes and acids produced by the cells of the stomach. These break down proteins, fats, and carbohydrates into smaller, more manageable pieces, which is really important because this allows them to actually be absorbed and put to good use. A big detail here is that the stomach must be acidic enough to carry out this important chemistry experiment!
Where can things go wrong? And what does this have to do with my acid reflux?
Contrary to popular belief, the stomach is rarely too acidic. In fact, the opposite problem is often behind the uncomfortable sensations of acid reflux and indigestion.
When the pH of the stomach doesn’t get low enough (ideally between 1.5 and 3), because of a decrease in those digestive juices, the acidic contents of the stomach stay in there too long. This partially digested substance begins producing gasses – kind of like a fizzy bottle of kombucha – and this pressure can cause the contents to push up on the esophageal sphincter (the muscle that closes off the esophagus from the stomach). As a result, not only might you burp or belch to release some of this gas, but those acidic contents might reflux up into the esophagus. So you can see how it’s less about there being too much acid in the stomach, and more about it getting to the wrong place. The esophagus is not meant to have acidic contents in it! It is designed to have a neutral pH of around 7. The stomach is the only place in the body that’s designed to have such a low pH!
So not only does this issue in the stomach cause digestive symptoms upstream, but when that stomach pH doesn’t get low enough, it also doesn’t trigger the pancreas or the gallbladder to do their very important jobs downstream. More on that in the next post in this series!
But why does this happen? What prevents the optimal production of those acidifying digestive juices?
So what do we do about it?
Surprise, surprise! Some of these things you’ve already read about in Part 2 and Part 3 of this series.
So there you have it – the stomach – a powerhouse organ of the Digestive Domino Track! It and its acid are not the villains they’ve been made out to be after all. We need stomach acid for optimal digestion and to eat and enjoy our meals symptom free.
In the next post, we’ll talk all about how that good food goes on to fuel our bodies when we discuss the small intestine.