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#1 Breathing Mistake Causing Reflux

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Manage episode 520102618 series 3646610
Content provided by Root Cause Medical Clinic. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Root Cause Medical Clinic or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

If you’re breathing through your mouth, you may be sabotaging your diaphragm, your posture, and your acid-reflux/hiatal hernia barrier.
Educational content reviewed by licensed APRN medical staff. Not personal medical advice.
In the video, Dr Vikki Petersen explains what the hidden link is between mouth-breathing, diaphragm dysfunction, intra-abdominal pressure spikes, posture and reflux/hiatal hernia — plus how to fix the root cause.
Hiatal hernia is very common (≈20% general population, it increases with age).
Hiatal hernia definition: 95% are sliding, and most are small
The esophagus passes through the hiatus (opening) in the diaphragm; the crural diaphragm acts as an external “sling” around esophagus - it acts as a valve, preventing reflux and hernia.
When the GEJ (gastro-esophageal junction) rises above the diaphragm, two things happen: the hiatal opening widens and weakens → reflux risk increases.
The diaphragm plays an important role in the antireflux barrier (not just LES but diaphragmatic component).
Nasal breathing engages diaphragm fully (belly movement, lower ribs) vs mouth breathing which often shifting you to shallow chest/neck breathing.
This reduces diaphragmatic excursion (movement) and tone over time; diaphragm becomes less efficient and more flattened.
Posture: mouth breathing often pulls head/neck forward (forward head posture), which changes rib cage mechanics, lengthens accessory muscles, and compromises phrenic nerve and vagus nerve -diaphragm.
Pressure dynamics: with impaired diaphragm and poor posture, the intra-abdominal pressure regulation becomes dysfunctional → more pressure spikes when coughing, lifting, straining.
Each cough, each lift, each straining episode creates an intra-abdominal pressure spike; a competent diaphragm/crural diaphragm and correct posture help buffer that.
If you're mouth-breathing, diaphragm is weak → the hiatus sees more stress → increased risk of the stomach bulging up (hiatal hernia) and reflux.
Research (study below): Diaphragmatic breathing increased LES pressure and reduced post-meal reflux events.
Mouth breathing often during sleep (snoring) means alternating cycles of airway collapse, negative intrathoracic pressure swings (rapid or exaggerated drops in pressure inside the chest – occur when someone is breathing forcefully, mouth breathing or struggling to breathe) → more reflux risk.
Root causes: nasal/sinus inflammation (allergy, mold, SIBO-driven sinusitis), autonomic imbalance (vagus suppression, sympathetic overdrive), structural airway (nasal deviation, adenoids), postural factors.
Interventions:
1. Restore nasal breathing (nasal rinse, address inflammation/allergy, ENT evaluation if structural).
2. Address systemic inflammation: food sensitivities, microbiome imbalance,
3. Postural reset: forward-head correction, rib cage alignment, diaphragm place.
4. Diaphragmatic breathing training (DBT): show technique (belly rise/inhale nose → exhale pursed lips).
#hiatalhernia #acidreflux #rootcausemedicine
Disclaimer: The information provided in this video is intended for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the guidance of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your health, medical condition, or treatment options. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have seen or heard in this video.
The views expressed are based on my clinical experience and current scientific understanding as of the date of publication. Individual results may vary.
Many viewers ask what to do next if symptoms persist.
Our licensed medical team at Root Cause Medical Clinic can help you identify the root cause.
➡ Learn more or boo

  continue reading

151 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 520102618 series 3646610
Content provided by Root Cause Medical Clinic. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Root Cause Medical Clinic or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

If you’re breathing through your mouth, you may be sabotaging your diaphragm, your posture, and your acid-reflux/hiatal hernia barrier.
Educational content reviewed by licensed APRN medical staff. Not personal medical advice.
In the video, Dr Vikki Petersen explains what the hidden link is between mouth-breathing, diaphragm dysfunction, intra-abdominal pressure spikes, posture and reflux/hiatal hernia — plus how to fix the root cause.
Hiatal hernia is very common (≈20% general population, it increases with age).
Hiatal hernia definition: 95% are sliding, and most are small
The esophagus passes through the hiatus (opening) in the diaphragm; the crural diaphragm acts as an external “sling” around esophagus - it acts as a valve, preventing reflux and hernia.
When the GEJ (gastro-esophageal junction) rises above the diaphragm, two things happen: the hiatal opening widens and weakens → reflux risk increases.
The diaphragm plays an important role in the antireflux barrier (not just LES but diaphragmatic component).
Nasal breathing engages diaphragm fully (belly movement, lower ribs) vs mouth breathing which often shifting you to shallow chest/neck breathing.
This reduces diaphragmatic excursion (movement) and tone over time; diaphragm becomes less efficient and more flattened.
Posture: mouth breathing often pulls head/neck forward (forward head posture), which changes rib cage mechanics, lengthens accessory muscles, and compromises phrenic nerve and vagus nerve -diaphragm.
Pressure dynamics: with impaired diaphragm and poor posture, the intra-abdominal pressure regulation becomes dysfunctional → more pressure spikes when coughing, lifting, straining.
Each cough, each lift, each straining episode creates an intra-abdominal pressure spike; a competent diaphragm/crural diaphragm and correct posture help buffer that.
If you're mouth-breathing, diaphragm is weak → the hiatus sees more stress → increased risk of the stomach bulging up (hiatal hernia) and reflux.
Research (study below): Diaphragmatic breathing increased LES pressure and reduced post-meal reflux events.
Mouth breathing often during sleep (snoring) means alternating cycles of airway collapse, negative intrathoracic pressure swings (rapid or exaggerated drops in pressure inside the chest – occur when someone is breathing forcefully, mouth breathing or struggling to breathe) → more reflux risk.
Root causes: nasal/sinus inflammation (allergy, mold, SIBO-driven sinusitis), autonomic imbalance (vagus suppression, sympathetic overdrive), structural airway (nasal deviation, adenoids), postural factors.
Interventions:
1. Restore nasal breathing (nasal rinse, address inflammation/allergy, ENT evaluation if structural).
2. Address systemic inflammation: food sensitivities, microbiome imbalance,
3. Postural reset: forward-head correction, rib cage alignment, diaphragm place.
4. Diaphragmatic breathing training (DBT): show technique (belly rise/inhale nose → exhale pursed lips).
#hiatalhernia #acidreflux #rootcausemedicine
Disclaimer: The information provided in this video is intended for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the guidance of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your health, medical condition, or treatment options. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have seen or heard in this video.
The views expressed are based on my clinical experience and current scientific understanding as of the date of publication. Individual results may vary.
Many viewers ask what to do next if symptoms persist.
Our licensed medical team at Root Cause Medical Clinic can help you identify the root cause.
➡ Learn more or boo

  continue reading

151 episodes

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