I've been taking Lansoprazole for a few years now, having been diagnosed with a Hiatus Hernia in my early 30s. Same family of drug and I can say it has massivley improved my position. Before taking the drugs I'd struggle with reflux after eating a sandwich, whereas now if i behave i have no problems at all.
Beer and spicy foods still cause problems when trying to sleep at night, so I have a handy bottle of Gaviscon at the ready for the times I misbehave (also referred to as weekends!).
I have a good friend on Omerprazole and he swears by it. As long as no nasty side effects it should sort you out, particuarly after they work out appropriate daily dose.
Interesting, thanks. I must get some Gavescon - one medic did suggest it, but I tend to be sceptical about over the counter drugs (no real reason for that).
Omeprazole is the cheap end of the anti acid market, its cheap for a reason, it doesn't work very well......I tried it, told the doctor it was no good, he tried me on two others.... cemetidene and something else, in the end Rabeprozole was the one that worked a treat, but they won't give it unless you ask......you are the customer, demand it......I reckon you will be sorted in two to three days.
They have tested me for hyper-pylori (sp?) but that result will take a while to come back - if that comes back positive, it can be treated.
Helicobacter Pylori, if you have it you'll be given esomeprazole (which is basically the same drug as omeprazole - its a specific enantiomer of the molecule) and two antibotics for two weeks generally.
Anyone else take Omeprazole for problem with stomach acid ?
I've not been able to eat properly for 2 months now, lots of vomiting and pain - the pain was so bad on Tues I was rushed to Worthing A&E and put on morphine (quite nice really). The general consensus is that it's excess stomach acid problem, though they are going to do an endoscopy in a couple of weeks to make sure it's nothing else.
This is really debilitating, not wanting to do anything or eat - must have lost a shed load of weight.
So, the question is, does this omeprazole work eventually ? I've been told it may take a while.
I had the exact same problem, like you I have found Lanzoprazole has really helped.
Interesting, thanks. I must get some Gavescon - one medic did suggest it, but I tend to be sceptical about over the counter drugs (no real reason for that). I drink virtually no alcohol anyway these days, and I'm not allowed fruit juices due to kidney failure, and must avoid the spicy stuff. Currently eating almost nothing, and vomiting maybe once a day (I don't mind that, I always feel better afterwards). Just working myself up to having a cup of tea, to see hos that goes.
This is wildly inaccurate. The reason there are multiple PPIs on the market is because some people have different reactions than others on them but it doesn't mean that omeprazole is in any way ineffective or 'cheap'
It and rabeprazole have extremely similar mechanisms of action anyway.
Thanks. Everyone I've spoken to is fully aware of my long list of existing meds. I had IV omeprazole in A&E on Tues and between that and the morphine I felt pretty good. My GP says that everyone's different, but it could take up to 2 weeks for this to work properly. Will just have to see how it goes, I guess. Not a lot of fun though.
I've been taking Lansoprazole for a few years now, having been diagnosed with a Hiatus Hernia in my early 30s. Same family of drug and I can say it has massivley improved my position. Before taking the drugs I'd struggle with reflux after eating a sandwich, whereas now if i behave i have no problems at all.
Beer and spicy foods still cause problems when trying to sleep at night, so I have a handy bottle of Gaviscon at the ready for the times I misbehave (also referred to as weekends!).
I have a good friend on Omerprazole and he swears by it. As long as no nasty side effects it should sort you out, particuarly after they work out appropriate daily dose.
Omeprozole is cheap, I know that for a fact, but of course we are all different and thus react to medication differently, .....However I know of two others who like myself got a better reaction from the top priced Rabeprozole...after trying the other offerings.
But I ain't a doctor, my wife is a dispenser....that's where I get the pricing info.
Having waded through several papers on clinical trials of these drugs, it seems there is very little to choose between Rabeprozole. They reports a comparison of 58% and 61% reduced symptoms after 3 weeks, so pretty much identical, really. An NHS comparison also suggests that Rabeprozole is cheaper and on a limited license (though I would have thought that would make it more expensive, but there you go). Quote :
Based on current costs (for its licensed indications) rabeprazole offers a price advantage over the
other 3 proton pump inhibitors.
● Rabeprazole has a limited licence compared to omeprazole and lansoprazole.
● There is no clinical advantage to be gained by changing from an existing PPI to rabeprazole.
I can only assume "Offers a price advantage ..." must mean "cheaper".
I've been taking Lansoprazole for a few years now, having been diagnosed with a Hiatus Hernia in my early 30s. Same family of drug and I can say it has massivley improved my position. Before taking the drugs I'd struggle with reflux after eating a sandwich, whereas now if i behave i have no problems at all.
Beer and spicy foods still cause problems when trying to sleep at night, so I have a handy bottle of Gaviscon at the ready for the times I misbehave (also referred to as weekends!).
I have a good friend on Omerprazole and he swears by it. As long as no nasty side effects it should sort you out, particuarly after they work out appropriate daily dose.
Well my surgery wrote to me three years ago to get me to change back to Omeprozole from Rabeprozole because they insisted there was virtually no clinical advantage ( I did tell them that one worked for me the other didn't)......and they mentioned it was available to the NHS at a more competitive price......... I just say it how I see it.
It's a little odd that a doctor would go against a patients experience. I appreciate as it's probably based on little medical knowledge, it is essentially anecdotal evidence, but it can't be discounted. Presumably, if the omeprazole doesn't work, you're just going to end up back at the doctors with symptoms again, and he'll have to prescribe something that does work.