The main cause of Acid Reflux happening in our bodies is the consumption of large amounts of foods, considered as acidic in nature. It all has to do with the quality of the muscles that participate in your digestion process. Muscles help transport food down your food pipe, into the stomach, and then onwards into the intestines.
Muscles assist food as it travels through the body. Entrance to the food pipe, arrival to the stomach and exit from the stomach is all controlled by valves which function by stimulating the entry, exit, and backflow of food that is being digested. The muscle which principally controls backflow from the stomach back into the esophagus is the lower esophageal sphincter, or LES.
Sometimes, due to weakening of these various muscles, food stays longer in the stomach. Malfunctioning valves, also manage to allow food into areas where it should not go, such as backward from the stomach into the food pipe. Of course, this backflow contains food, digested by stomach acids, and that's why we get the sour warm sensation in our throats. In addition, sometimes, this acid is harmful to the walls of our food pipe, which end up getting scarred.
This, then, is the cause of getting an "obstructed" feeling, as if food is stuck in your throat. With weak muscles, disobedient muscles, and irregular digestive processing in the chest and stomach area, it affects other systems too. Stress prone people often get breathing problems as a result.
Although many people believe it is so, eating acidic foods will not make any part of your body more acidic. The stomach naturally produces hydrochloric acid during regular digestion and it is this acid reentering the esophagus that results in acid reflux.
Individuals who suffer from acid reflux will want to stay away from spearmint, peppermint, chocolate, caffeine, and alcohol. Fatty or processed foods and unhealthy fast foods should be avoided in an effort to alleviate symptoms of acid reflux. Carbonated drinks can also worsen symptoms and should therefore not be consumed.
You are what you eat. It's all about maintaining the acid-alkaline balance in your body. You may eat a diet rich in fruits and vegetables, avoiding certain acidic fruits like oranges, tomatoes, grapefruit etc. Add multigrain items to your diet. Increase the proteins (to strengthen your muscles), and if you insist on being carnivorous, restrict your self to white meat and poultry, prepared in a low fat manner --
You can keep from experiencing the unpleasant symptoms of acid reflux disease by reducing stress, getting lots of sleep, exercising regularly, and trying to maintain a healthy weight.