Health & Wellbeing
| Dec 16, 2022

New treatment on offer for acid reflux sufferers in the Caribbean

/ Our Today

administrator
Reading Time: 2 minutes

Longtime sufferers of acid reflux disease, the most common gastrointestinal disease in the Caribbean and across the globe, have received new hope from the medical community in the region.

Gastroenterologist Dr Sunil K. Mathai, of Health City Cayman Islands, says the Transoral Incisionless Fundoplication (TIF) is now available to treat acid reflux and other symptoms associated with Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD) in patients who do not respond to lifestyle modifications and medication.

According to the American College of Gastroenterology, GERD is a chronic medical condition caused by the flow of content from the stomach upwards into the esophagus, resulting in both symptoms and complications.

Dr Sunil Mathai, gastroenterologist.

The most common symptoms of GERD are heartburn and regurgitation. Heartburn is a burning sensation in the chest behind the breastbone whereas regurgitation is a feeling of fluid or food coming up into the chest.

Some patients may experience both symptoms.

Complications of GERD include esophagitis, esophageal stricture, and precancerous changes to the esophagus. 

Mathai, who has more than 25 years of experience treating gastrointestinal disease, said that, during the procedure, the interventional gastroenterologist reconstructs the valve between the stomach and esophagus by using a special TIF device along with an endoscope.

Health City Cayman Islands. (Photo: healthcitycaymanislands.com)

He explained that “folding the fundus (around the opening between the stomach and esophagus) with stitches prevents stomach acid from coming up into the esophagus and this creates a new barrier to reflux from the stomach”.

Apart from offering endoscopic tightening of the gastroesophageal junction, the Health City Cayman Islands gastrointestinal department also provides 24-hour wireless esophageal pH capsule monitoring (BRAVO) for determining the frequency and duration of reflux events and esophageal manometry for the diagnosis of motility disorders of the esophagus.

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