Ol'Line Rebel
10-03-2006, 04:18 PM
Just curious. I've thought about this a long time.
How is it a pH test is the "gold standard" for GERD?
GERD, the disease, presents the same way alot of diseases do - with reflux. Reflux is not the disease, it is a symptom and can be a symptom (apparently) of several things. (This goes back to my pet peeve about calling this condition "acid-reflux disease" when it's really the sphincter causing the reflux, as opposed to e.g., gastritis, gastroparesis, etc.)
So if many things can cause bad reflux, why if you get a "fail" on the pH are you automatically branded as "GERD"? Couldn't it still be something else, and not the sphincters? :dizzy:
It seems to me of the tests I've heard of, the manometry should be the standard. :confused: After all, GERD means the sphincters failed, and if you show low pressure there, surely that's closer to a "bingo" as far as actually having "sphincter disease" (GERD). If you are showing normal - something else is causing this symptom?
How is it a pH test is the "gold standard" for GERD?
GERD, the disease, presents the same way alot of diseases do - with reflux. Reflux is not the disease, it is a symptom and can be a symptom (apparently) of several things. (This goes back to my pet peeve about calling this condition "acid-reflux disease" when it's really the sphincter causing the reflux, as opposed to e.g., gastritis, gastroparesis, etc.)
So if many things can cause bad reflux, why if you get a "fail" on the pH are you automatically branded as "GERD"? Couldn't it still be something else, and not the sphincters? :dizzy:
It seems to me of the tests I've heard of, the manometry should be the standard. :confused: After all, GERD means the sphincters failed, and if you show low pressure there, surely that's closer to a "bingo" as far as actually having "sphincter disease" (GERD). If you are showing normal - something else is causing this symptom?

