Low stomach acid? Read this!

Remy

Administrator
The conventional HCL challenge test involves the ingestion of Betaine Hydrochloride in order to gauge if the parietal cells of your stomach are producing adequate amounts of stomach acid. The test typically involves taking one HCL pill with food and then increasing by one per day until a burning occurs. If burning takes place at a low dose it is thought that this is because your stomach is producing adequate HCL. And if a burning occurs at a higher dose it is thought that it is due to low levels of HCL production in the stomach.

The problem is that this is absolutely not what is really happening with this test.

Read the rest here: https://metabolichealing.com/the-hcl-challenge-why-the-conventional-test-is-dead-wrong/
 

Not dead yet!

Well-Known Member
We've finally won the battle that proves that H pylorii is the primary culprit in the mucosal damage. But since the cure is antibiotics used in combination, and the prevention is unfeasible for almost all city water deparments (it reinfects you through the water you drink), very few, if any, clinical guidelines actually tell a doctor to check for and cure it. Further, training is so lacking that people can be given advice that invalidates a test while testing for any recurrence.

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/465198
Discontinuation of PPI Prior to Urea Breath Test ; Chey ; 12/09/2003
[article]PPIs have also been found to adversely affect the sensitivity of the UBT and stool antigen test. Studies have reported that between 33% and 50% of patients taking conventional doses of a PPI develop a false-negative breath-test result and that this effect resolves within a period of 7-14 days. The mechanisms responsible for the effects of PPIs on the UBT remain incompletely defined. [/article]

Most doctors offices, including mine, give the opposite advice to the above warnings. The nurse who explained the test to me told me it was Carbon Dioxide they were looking for!
 

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