Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I'm 31 weeks pregnant and getting terrible heartburn. Since Saturday I've also had a sore throat, cough and earache on top of the heartburn, and the combination of all four is making me quite miserable! It sounds odd, but I'm getting loads of excess saliva in my mouth (I think as a by-product of the heartburn) and this is making me feel hungry all the time (you know the feeling in your tummy when you've been chewing gum...as if your stomach is preparing for food?).


Anyway, just wondered if anyone has suffered the same kind of thing, and if you have any tips on how to deal with it.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/13377-horrible-heartburn/
Share on other sites

I have been having terrible heartburn /acid reflux for a few weeks now - am 35w come Friday. Sometimes I get it without even eating. It's horrendous. Rennie tablets work better for me than Gaviscon


Prop yourself up on pillows at night and try not to eat too late. Small meals and often rather than big ones. Avoid fried food at all costs


You sound as if you have a bad cold on top of it - there is a bad one going round. Seeing your GP cant hurt


Good luck - when baby drops down it's all meant to get easier - but then again my daughter did not until I was about to push!

I suffered terribly with this when preggers and found Gaviscon to be the only cure. As Pollyd said, get it on prescription as you can get through quite a bit of it. I even went to bed clutching my bottle - (like an alcoholic!) as one night it was toooo bad. Thankfully it disappears the moment you give birth, but then you have a few other things to worry about...!
Omeprazole was my saviour! Prescribed by my doctor and safe during pregnancy. It was better than Gaviscon for me as it had no effect and made me gag too.Continued taking after for about 6 months as unfortunately my heartburn didn't subside with birth....still suffer every now and then 2 years later!

Omeprazole is great, but don't think you can take it during pregnancy as my doctor told me to switch to Gaviscon for heartburn.


Sorry edited to say I didn't read through all the posts - maybe my dr was just being overly cautious and told me not to take Omeprazole! I don't want to scare anyone!

You can take ranitidine or omeprazole in pg. I was so bad with heartburn and retching with the twins I was admitted to hospital and had a little camera put down my throat!


This time round I am, again, getting through oodles of gaviscon. Dr very disapproving, thinks I should take two tablets once a day!!

I think drs tend to discourage omeprazole/ranitidine in early pregnancy, simply being overly cautious (and rightly so!). Once you're out of those first few crucial weeks, they should be just fine.


You can also get an H. Pylori test, if heartburn is suspected stomach ulcer. Antibiotics for this should be safe in later pregnancy too.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Hi, Self explanatory anyone help or point me in  right direction please.   Thanks  
    • Cheques are still the safest way to send money to others if you want to make a 'thing' of it. At Christmas or birthdays a card with a cheque is the most effective present to distant god children or extended family, for instance when you don't know what they have or need - made out to the parent if you don't think they have an account yet. Of course you can use electronic transfer, often, to parents if you set it up, but that doesn't quite have the impact of a cheque in the post. So a cheque still has a use, I believe, even when you have very much reduced your cheque writing for other purposes.
    • I believe "Dulwich" is deemed where Dulwich library is situated so left at Peckham rye and straight up Barry Road
    • The solution for the cost of duvet washing is for each person to have their own single duvet like in Scandinavia.  Then you can wash the duvet in your own washing machine. Get a heated drying rack if you don’t have a tumble dryer.          
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...