A sore throat caused by acid reflux — technically called Laryngopharyngeal Reflux (LPR) or silent reflux — can be one of the most frustrating symptoms to deal with, partly because it doesn’t behave like a typical sore throat. It doesn’t respond to throat lozenges or antibiotics. It can persist for weeks or months. And for many people it fluctuates unpredictably, making it hard to know whether they’re healing or not.
The honest answer to how long it takes to heal is: it depends — but there are specific factors that determine that timeline, and most of them are within your control. Done right, some people start to feel meaningful improvement within 1–2 weeks. Others with more established damage need several months of consistent management before the throat settles. I know from my own experience — it took me around six months to fully recover from LPR after years of suffering — but I also saw early signs of improvement within days of starting the right approach.
What matters most is understanding why the throat takes so long to heal in the first place, and what you need to stop doing (and start doing) to actually let that healing happen.
Key Takeaways
- A sore throat from acid reflux is caused by LPR — acid and pepsin reaching the larynx and pharynx, which are far more sensitive to damage than the esophagus.
- Healing time ranges from 1–2 weeks for mild cases to several months for more severe or longstanding LPR — but most people see early improvement within days of implementing the right changes.
- The biggest reason people don’t heal is that they keep reactivating dormant pepsin in the throat — every acidic food or drink wakes it back up and restarts the damage cycle.
- Pepsin remains stable in throat tissue for at least 24 hours after a reflux event and can be reactivated by anything with a pH below around 6.5 — including coffee, citrus, fizzy drinks, and alcohol.
- A strict low-acid diet (eliminating foods below pH 5) led to significant symptom improvement in 95% of LPR patients who had failed PPI therapy in a published clinical study, within just 2 weeks.
- Gaviscon Advance (UK version) is a critical part of the healing protocol because it physically blocks further pepsin and acid from reaching the throat — giving the tissue the chance to recover.
- Symptoms tend to improve before the physical tissue changes heal — so you may feel better before the laryngoscopic findings fully resolve.
- PPIs are not an effective treatment for LPR-driven throat soreness and will not meaningfully accelerate healing on their own.
Why an Acid Reflux Sore Throat Takes Longer to Heal Than You’d Expect
The throat — specifically the larynx and pharynx — is not designed to be exposed to stomach contents. Unlike the esophagus, which has a thick protective mucosa and can clear acid relatively quickly, the laryngeal lining has very little natural defence against pepsin and acid. Even small amounts of refluxate reaching the throat cause disproportionate irritation, and repeated exposure leads to cumulative inflammation that can take weeks or months to fully resolve.
But here’s what makes it especially difficult: even when you stop the active reflux, the throat doesn’t immediately get to rest. Pepsin — the digestive enzyme that arrives in the throat during reflux — doesn’t simply disappear when the reflux event ends. Research has shown that pepsin remains stable in laryngeal tissue for at least 24 hours at neutral pH, sitting dormant but fully capable of reactivation [Johnston et al., The Laryngoscope, 2007]. The moment something acidic — coffee, citrus, a fizzy drink, even a minor new reflux event — lowers the local pH, that dormant pepsin becomes active again and resumes attacking the tissue.
This is why so many people struggle to heal despite doing “most things right.” A single acidic meal or drink in an otherwise good week can reactivate pepsin that was sitting quietly in the throat lining and set the healing clock back. It’s also the main reason why PPIs alone rarely resolve LPR throat symptoms — they reduce gastric acid, but they don’t prevent pepsin from being carried upward during reflux events, and they have no effect on pepsin that’s already been deposited in throat tissue [Vaezi et al., Laryngoscope, 2011].
Furthermore, research has confirmed that acid and pepsin together actively impair laryngeal wound healing. A study examining glottic healing in a reflux model found that tissue recovery was significantly disrupted by acid and pepsin exposure compared to controls — directly demonstrating that ongoing reflux prevents the throat from healing even when other treatments are in place [Ylitalo et al., Archives of Otolaryngology, 2006].
Realistic Healing Timelines: What to Expect
There’s no single answer that applies to everyone, but based on both the research and what I’ve observed over many years of working through this condition and helping others, here is a realistic framework.
Mild LPR (recent onset, intermittent throat soreness)
If your symptoms started relatively recently, are intermittent rather than constant, and you move quickly onto the right approach, you can expect to see meaningful improvement within 1–2 weeks. Some people feel noticeably better within a few days of eliminating the most acidic foods and drinks and starting Gaviscon Advance. Full resolution can often be achieved within 4–6 weeks with consistent management.
Moderate LPR (persistent soreness, a few months of symptoms)
If you’ve had ongoing throat soreness for several weeks to a few months, expect a longer runway. Improvement typically starts within the first 2–4 weeks of proper management, but the throat may take 2–4 months to feel consistently good. You’re likely to have some better periods interrupted by setbacks, particularly early on if you slip on the diet. Consistency is the most important variable here.
Severe or longstanding LPR (many months or years)
For people who have had significant LPR symptoms for six months or more — particularly if they’ve been on ineffective treatments during that time — healing is a longer process. Expect 3–6 months of consistent effort before feeling substantially better, and potentially longer before symptoms fully resolve. This was my own experience — I suffered badly for around two years before implementing the right approach, and it took approximately six months of consistent low-acid eating and Gaviscon Advance before I felt fully recovered. But I did see gradual, sustained improvement throughout that period rather than nothing changing.
One important point from the research: LPR symptoms typically improve before the physical tissue changes resolve. A published study confirmed that RSI (symptom) scores improve ahead of the laryngoscopic findings — meaning you may feel significantly better before the throat looks fully healed on examination [Zhang et al., Journal of Clinical Medicine, 2023]. Don’t take a slow improvement in how things look as a sign that healing isn’t happening — if your symptoms are improving, it is.
The Most Important Step: The Low-Acid Diet
Diet is by far the most critical factor in how quickly a reflux sore throat heals — more important than any medication. The reason is the pepsin mechanism described above: every acidic food or drink you consume has the potential to reactivate dormant pepsin in your throat and extend your recovery. If you’re eating or drinking things that drop the local throat pH below around 6, you are actively working against healing every single day.
A clinical study tested a strict low-acid diet — eliminating all foods and drinks with a pH below 5 — in 20 patients with LPR who had already failed PPI therapy. Within just 2 weeks on this diet, 95% showed significant improvement in RSI scores, and 3 became completely asymptomatic [Koufman, The Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology, 2011]. This is one of the clearest demonstrations that dietary acid restriction — not medication — is the primary driver of healing for LPR throat symptoms.
A separate study of 105 LPR patients on a structured anti-reflux programme (combining diet, alkaline water, and lifestyle modifications) found that 91% reported subjective improvement in symptoms at an average 32-day follow-up, with significant reductions in RSI and cough severity scores [Lechien et al., Journal of Voice, 2018].
The foods and drinks most likely to slow your healing by reactivating throat pepsin are:
- Coffee and tea (caffeinated and many herbal varieties)
- Alcohol — especially wine, beer, and spirits
- Carbonated drinks, including sparkling water
- Citrus fruits and juices
- Tomatoes and tomato-based sauces
- Vinegar and anything pickled
- Chocolate and peppermint
- Spicy foods
- High-fat fried foods (slow gastric emptying, increasing reflux risk)
For a more complete structured approach to the diet, my LPR diet guide covers the first steps, and the Wipeout Diet Plan provides a full framework if you want a comprehensive protocol with everything mapped out.
Gaviscon Advance: The Barrier That Allows Healing
The second most important element in healing a reflux sore throat is creating a physical barrier that stops acid and pepsin from reaching the throat in the first place. This is where Gaviscon Advance — specifically the UK formulation — comes in.
When taken after meals and before bed, the sodium alginate in Gaviscon Advance reacts with stomach acid to form a thick raft on top of your stomach contents. This raft physically prevents reflux from carrying pepsin upward into the esophagus and throat. Research also shows that alginate can bind directly to the esophageal and throat mucosa, providing a protective coating that helps reduce further pepsin-acid contact [Mandel et al., The Laryngoscope, 2022].
A multicenter randomised controlled trial found that patients combining dietary modifications with mucosal protectors (which include alginate-based products) showed the most significant improvements in RSI and RFS scores — as well as the greatest reduction in salivary and nasal pepsin concentrations — compared to diet or mucosal protectors alone [Lechien et al., European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology, 2025]. This confirms that combining diet with a barrier agent works better than either approach on its own.
The reason I specify the UK version is that it contains a significantly higher concentration of sodium alginate than the US formulation — making the raft it forms both thicker and more durable. You can find more detail in my article on why Gaviscon Advance is the best choice for reflux. If you’re in the US, the UK version is available through Amazon.
During the active healing phase, take it after every meal and before bed. As symptoms improve over weeks to months, you can gradually reduce the frequency — but early on, consistent use is important.
Why PPIs Won’t Heal Your Reflux Sore Throat
If your doctor has prescribed omeprazole, lansoprazole, or another proton pump inhibitor for your sore throat, it’s important to understand what these drugs can and can’t do for LPR specifically.
PPIs reduce gastric acid production. For classic GERD — where acid entering the esophagus causes heartburn and esophagitis — they can be very effective. But for LPR throat symptoms, the evidence is consistently disappointing. Multiple randomised controlled trials have found no significant benefit of PPIs over placebo for LPR-specific symptoms. In one large trial, 16 weeks of lansoprazole twice daily produced no meaningful difference in RSI scores compared to placebo across 220 patients [Krause et al., Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2022].
The reason, as explained above, is pepsin. PPIs don’t stop non-acidic reflux from carrying pepsin upward, and they can’t reach pepsin that’s already been deposited in throat tissue. If you’re currently on a PPI and want to come off it, discuss a gradual taper with your doctor rather than stopping abruptly — sudden cessation can cause rebound acid hypersecretion. You can read more about this in my article on why acid reflux medication often doesn’t work for LPR.
Signs Your Throat Is Healing
Because LPR healing is gradual, it can be difficult to know whether you’re making progress, particularly in the first few weeks. Here are the signs I’d look for:
- The baseline soreness diminishes. Rather than a constant ache or rawness in the throat, you start having periods — initially a few hours, then half days, then full days — where the throat feels relatively normal.
- Flare-ups become less severe. You’ll likely still have bad days early in recovery, particularly after dietary slip-ups or stressful periods. But the severity of those flares should gradually decrease over time.
- Morning symptoms improve. Waking with a sore or raw throat is a hallmark of nocturnal reflux. As nighttime reflux reduces (with Gaviscon Advance before bed and better sleep positioning), morning soreness is usually one of the first things to improve.
- Less throat clearing. Chronic throat clearing — the body trying to clear irritated mucosa — tends to reduce as the inflammation settles.
- Other LPR symptoms reduce in parallel. Hoarseness, post-nasal drip, and the lump sensation often improve alongside the soreness as the laryngeal inflammation resolves.
If you’re unsure whether your symptoms are actually LPR-related or have a different cause, taking the RSI (Reflux Symptom Index) test on this site can help clarify — a score of 13 or above is considered strongly suggestive of LPR.
What Slows or Stops Healing
Understanding the healing blockers is as important as knowing what to do. These are the most common reasons people plateau or fail to improve:
- Dietary inconsistency. One or two acidic meals or drinks per week is enough to repeatedly reactivate throat pepsin and prevent sustained healing. During the active recovery phase especially, consistency is everything.
- Late eating. Eating within 3 hours of lying down keeps stomach contents — and pepsin — available to reflux during sleep. Nighttime reflux is particularly damaging because there’s no swallowing or saliva to clear it.
- Alcohol, even occasionally. Alcohol relaxes the LES, increases acid production, and is itself acidic enough to reactivate throat pepsin. Even infrequent consumption in the early healing phase can significantly slow recovery.
- Stress. As covered in my article on LPR and anxiety, stress reduces LES pressure and heightens visceral sensitivity, making reflux more frequent and symptoms feel worse.
- Relying on PPIs alone. If you’re only taking a PPI and haven’t made dietary changes or added an alginate, you’re likely not addressing the pepsin component that’s driving the throat damage.
Conclusion
Healing a sore throat caused by acid reflux is achievable — but it requires a specific approach that addresses the pepsin problem, not just acid suppression. The key elements are a consistent low-acid diet that doesn’t keep reactivating dormant pepsin, a physical barrier like Gaviscon Advance that stops further reflux from reaching the throat, and the lifestyle changes that reduce nocturnal reflux. Get those three things working together and most people see real, sustained improvement — often within weeks for mild cases, and within a few months for more established LPR.
If you want a structured, research-backed framework that maps out exactly how to do this — what to eat, what to avoid, how to use alginates effectively, and how to manage the process step by step — the Wipeout Diet Plan is built specifically around LPR and GERD recovery. It’s the same approach that helped me recover, and what I recommend to others who want to move beyond generic reflux advice and actually get better. The diet is the single biggest lever in healing a reflux sore throat — having a clear, structured plan to follow makes a real difference in maintaining the consistency that healing requires.
If you’d like to talk through your specific symptoms and situation, a one-to-one consultation with me is available — we can look at what’s working, what isn’t, and what the next step is for you specifically.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a sore throat from acid reflux take to heal?
It varies depending on how long you’ve had it and how consistently you manage it. Mild cases that are caught early can improve meaningfully within 1–2 weeks of starting a low-acid diet and Gaviscon Advance. More established LPR throat soreness — where there’s been ongoing damage for months — typically takes 2–6 months to fully resolve. The good news is that most people notice early improvement within the first 1–2 weeks of the right approach, even if full healing takes longer.
Why won’t my sore throat from acid reflux go away?
The most common reason is that something is repeatedly reactivating pepsin in your throat. Every acidic food or drink — coffee, alcohol, citrus, fizzy drinks, vinegar — can reactivate dormant pepsin that’s been deposited on the throat lining from previous reflux events. If you’re consuming these regularly, even an otherwise good diet won’t allow the throat to fully heal. The other common reason is relying on PPIs, which don’t address the pepsin mechanism and have poor evidence for LPR-specific throat symptoms.
Can acid reflux cause a permanently sore throat?
For the vast majority of people, no — a reflux sore throat will heal with the right management. However, if LPR is left untreated or poorly managed for a very long time, cumulative damage to the laryngeal tissue can become more entrenched and take longer to resolve. This is one reason early, consistent intervention matters. If symptoms have been present for many months with no improvement despite following a proper approach, it’s worth seeing an ENT who can assess the throat with laryngoscopy and rule out other causes.
What helps a sore throat from acid reflux heal faster?
Three things make the biggest difference: first, a strict low-acid diet that eliminates anything likely to reactivate throat pepsin; second, Gaviscon Advance (UK version) after meals and before bed to create a physical barrier that prevents further reflux from reaching the throat; and third, consistent sleep hygiene — not eating within 3 hours of bed and elevating the head of your bed. Together these create the conditions the throat needs to actually recover rather than constantly being re-damaged.
Does drinking water help a sore throat from acid reflux?
Plain still water helps, and alkaline water (pH 8.8 or above) may be particularly beneficial for LPR. Research has shown that alkaline water at pH 8.8 can irreversibly inactivate pepsin, which gives it a specific advantage over regular water for throat reflux symptoms. Sipping alkaline water throughout the day and especially after meals can help neutralise pepsin that’s sitting in the throat. Avoid sparkling water even at a higher pH — the carbonation increases gastric pressure and promotes reflux.
How do I know if my sore throat is from acid reflux or something else?
A few distinguishing features suggest LPR rather than an infectious sore throat: the soreness tends to be chronic or recurring rather than coming on acutely; it’s often worse in the morning and/or after eating; it frequently comes with other throat symptoms like throat clearing, hoarseness, globus (lump feeling), or post-nasal drip; and it doesn’t improve with antibiotics or standard throat remedies. You can use the RSI test on this site to assess your symptoms — a score of 13 or above is strongly suggestive of LPR. If in doubt, an ENT can assess the throat directly with a laryngoscope.
Is LPR sore throat worse in the morning?
Yes, for many people it is — and this is a classic sign of nocturnal reflux. During sleep, lying flat removes gravity’s protection, swallowing drops significantly, and saliva production decreases. Reflux events during the night leave pepsin and acid in contact with the throat for extended periods with no clearance mechanism. The accumulated irritation shows up as soreness or rawness first thing in the morning. Addressing nighttime reflux — through meal timing, sleep position, and bedtime Gaviscon Advance — tends to improve morning symptoms faster than anything else. My article on acid reflux at night covers this in detail.
Related Articles
- The Complete Guide to LPR (Laryngopharyngeal Reflux)
- LPR Symptoms: What to Look For
- How to Get Rid of Acid Reflux in the Throat
- Gaviscon Advance: Why It’s the Best Choice for Reflux
- Why Your Acid Reflux Medication Isn’t Working
- Acid Reflux at Night: How to Stop It and Sleep Better
- LPR Diet: Foods to Eat and Avoid
Research Sources
Pepsin remains stable in laryngeal tissue for at least 24 hours at neutral pH and retains 79% of its original activity after reacidification, meaning it can be reactivated by any subsequent acidic exposure in the throat [Johnston et al., The Laryngoscope, 2007]. Pepsin adheres to laryngeal epithelium and even without acid can damage cells through receptor-mediated endocytosis into intracellular compartments of lower pH [Vaezi et al., Laryngoscope, 2011].
Acid and pepsin exposure significantly impaired laryngeal wound healing compared to controls in a simulated reflux animal model, demonstrating that ongoing reflux actively prevents throat tissue recovery [Ylitalo et al., Archives of Otolaryngology, 2006]. A strict low-acid diet (eliminating all foods below pH 5) produced significant RSI improvement in 95% of PPI-resistant LPR patients within 2 weeks [Koufman, The Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology, 2011].
91% of LPR patients on a structured anti-reflux programme (diet, alkaline water, lifestyle modifications) reported subjective improvement at an average 32-day follow-up with significant RSI and cough severity reductions [Lechien et al., Journal of Voice, 2018]. Combined dietary modifications and mucosal protectors produced the most significant reductions in RSI, RFS, and salivary pepsin concentrations compared to either strategy alone [Lechien et al., European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology, 2025].
Alginate (Gaviscon Advance) preserved esophageal and throat epithelial barrier function during pepsin-acid insult better than placebo, supporting topical barrier protection as a key therapeutic approach [Mandel et al., The Laryngoscope, 2022]. A 16-week randomised trial of PPIs for LPR found no significant benefit over placebo in RSI scores across 220 patients, confirming the limited role of acid suppression alone for LPR throat symptoms [Krause et al., Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2022].
David Gray
Content Researcher & Author
David Gray founded Wipeout Reflux to address a critical gap in reflux management. His research synthesizes over 100 peer-reviewed studies on laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR), pepsin biology, and GERD pathophysiology. For LPR specifically—a condition most physicians misdiagnose—his work focuses on pepsin reactivation and why standard PPI therapy fails most patients. He develops evidence-based protocols targeting root causes of both LPR and GERD, integrating emerging research on sphincter dysfunction, dietary interventions, and newer clinical approaches. Wipeout Reflux represents practical application of clinical science for patients seeking real solutions.


Hi David,
Is it possible after you are healing from LPR your voice is changed, what’s your experience? I got healed from lpr, no more symptoms for one week, but my voice is not the same, I speak and get tired easily. Do you had the same experience? thanks
I have had a similar experience before yes. Perhaps you are still healing based on what you said. The more small or subtle symptoms may take a little longer to heal.
Hello David,
I have LPR and sinus, both seem to be making the other worse. I started following an alkaline diet but one side of my ear, throat and jaw still keep burning up. I am also taking a PPI.
You mentioned that a diet for LPR is different, that actually sparks some hope. So are the do’s and don’ts different compared to GERD?
Hi Kan,
Yeah a low acid and natural diet is basically essential for helping LPR. When compared with GERD LPR has some important difference and really can not be treated in the exact same way. So even following a typical acid reflux diet for heartburn and GERD may not give you the best healing chance. There dose need to be some adjustments when doing an LPR diet to get the best effect.
Hello from 1 months I m suffering dry throat like something is stuck in back of throat and sometimes feels like shortness of breath from mouth and even feels discomfort in stomach with no fever is it really because acid reflux ?
Absolutely both the lump in throat feeling and the shortness of breath can be because of acid reflux more appropriately called LPR of course.
Absolutely both the lump in throat feeling and the shortness of breath can be because of acid reflux more appropriately called LPR of course.
Hello from 1 months I m suffering dry throat like something is stuck in back of throat and sometimes feels like shortness of breath from mouth and even feels discomfort in stomach with no fever is it really because acid reflux ?
Hi Shubham, well both of them are common symptoms of LPR so the possibility is definitely probable.
Does everyone get cured eventually? Had it for 2 months have been freaked out
I would say not everyone no, though the majority of people can at least see a good improvement in symptoms.
Hi. I’m suffering from the same problem. Antacids take time to heal? I’m been taking it for two days. No difference.
Consider to eliminate the common acid reflux trigger foods and if that doesn’t help try a low acid diet like my wipeout diet plan.
This is utterly maddening – Have had this since last September.
Went to Doc first and was prescribed antibiotics. Didn’t work. Went again, different antibiotics – didn’t work. Doc ended up in hospital himself so went to locum when it got really bad and was prescribed strong antibiotics – didn’t work. Enter coronavirus. Was so frustrated by it all went to pharmacy to have instant swab test to see if it was bacterial – it wasn’t. Have wasted over 600 euros with Doctors because they follow a particular protocol and don’t swab you there and then.
My Doc got better and said he would refer me to specialist but corona in full flow so too risky so it was down to me and here we are. The reason I believe it to be LPR, apart from familiar symptoms(especially lump in throat), is because after I take a half teaspoon of sodium bicarbonate and drink it down slowly, I get relief.
5 days ago David, I started taking your advice with a very strict diet and things have got a little worse but manageable with paracetamol and sodium bicarbonate. I imagine it might have become worse because, well I’m not sure to be completely honest but I’m speculating that the drastic change in diet might have provoked an initial reaction, I hope.
The commentary here and your site are bringing me hope and inspiration – will try the spray approach with sodium bicarbonate(can’t find alkaline water anywhere here in Dublin) and will refine my diet further still as needs arise and definitely buying some Gaviscon advance this afternoon.
Thanks very much for this great resource, this issue has subsumed my life by now and is really grinding me down so any help is deeply appreciated. Sincerely, Paul.
Hi Paul,
Sorry for your bad experience. The antibiotics likely make things worse I imagine because they aren’t great for the stomach and digestive system as a whole as you probably know. I think a lot of us have had a somewhat similar experience to you in the sense of struggling to get the right answers when it comes to diagnosing LPR in the first place.
It sounds like you are on the right track now, with the diet and also the Gaviscon, also definitely alkaline water will help if you can find some option locally.
On top of that things like not eating soon before bedtime (3 hours minimum) and not eating big portions are also a great idea.
Hi David,
I’ve been diagnosed with severe LPR by my ENT a month ago and have been on PPI (pantropazole) – 40 mg for about 46 days (my GP started me early), now on 20 mg for 3 days. I’m planning to taper of it and how would you best advice me to do it considering that I’ve not used it that long?
The only symptom i have is a burning throat/sore throat which seems to be getting less severe (I think) as I’m adapting lifestyle/diet changes. I guess my vices are eating late, overeating, exercising heavy after eating sometimes, dark chocolate sometimes after dinner, and sleeping with 1-3 hours after dinner (not all the time). I was having throat irritation since mid Jan this year i think.
Also can i taper with Gaviscon Advance and what are the long term side effects of Gaviscon?
Do LES/UES heal over time with the damage done or will this be generally a lifetime sentence?
Hi Sam,
I actually covered how to taper off PPIs on my article here – getting off PPIs and acid rebound. Yes you can taper with Gaviscon as it should make the transition easier. There are not really any major long term side effects of gaviscon. The LES and UES can heal yes, though it’s not certain that they are your root cause.
I am suffering LPR for 2 weeks then I reached a doctor. Then she give me prescription meds for two weeks such antacids, antibiotic and vit c supplement. Almost a week of drinking meds but still my body temp not normal 37.4 degrees. How could treat my body temp?
I am not sure on that one Mark. Perhaps it’s not related to LPR in your case.
Hi Mark, if you’ve got a fever, go back to your doctor. You could possibly have a chest infection from the LPR aspirating into your lungs. This happened to me and I contracted pneumonia.
In mid November I woke up to violent acid reflux coming up into my mouth twice in a week. I haven’t had those symptoms since, but I do get that uneasy feeling in my stomach throughout the day at times. I have been prescribed Nexium, after being on Prilosec for 20 yrs. I went to see an ENT and he diagnosed me with inflammation on top of the voice box cartilages after eight weeks on Jan. 23rd. It has been terrible to talking at times as the throat pain will get worse as I talk, or raise my voice. It’s hard to constantly keep quite, even though that’s what I need. Has anyone else suffered like I have? I watch what I eat now, but could benefit from your diet.
Hey Charles, Yes I have had that symptom the same as yourself and as have many more with LPR, it’s a common symptom. I do believe a low acid diet like the one I created to be the best way to stop it from happening. While sometimes H2 blockers can help I don’t think they are the best choice and I especially recommend to avoid PPI tablets. Hope this helps.