I asked some questions about B12 and Diarrhoea here:
healthunlocked.com/pasoc/po...
Some people came back suggesting that low stomach acid (hypochlorhydria or achlorhydria) is a cause of stomach acid. I did the sodium bicarbonate "burp" test and it seems I might have low stomach acid.
I have got 2 questions.
1) references
Are there any NHS, NICE, BMJ or other UK standard references that confirm this link? The British Society of GE guidelines (gut.bmj.com/content/67/8/13... makes a very short reference to achlorhydria in section 6.5 - small bowel bacterial overgrowth (SBBO):
"Authors have also reported a high prevalence of SBBO in situations associated with achlorhydria such as old age or medical therapy with proton pump inhibitors."
Can anyone point me at something a bit simpler that I can forward to my GP - this heathline article healthline.com/health/achlo... is roughly what I am looking for but ideally it has the NHS or BMJ stamp of authority.
Ideally there would be something on the NHS website but the terms low stomach acid, hypochlorhydria or achlorhydria don't yield any results.
2) GP tests.
I know that GE consultants have access to 24 hour ph monitoring tests and probably take samples via endoscopy.
Are there any tests that GPs can do for low stomach acid? I found this article on the BMJ (bestpractice.bmj.com/topics... which lists best practice and it mentions an intragastric pH test in its first line of tests. The authors are American so this test may not be available to GPs in the UK.
Anyone know whether a UK GP has access to an intragastric pH test available? They all look like hospital tests to me.
The article refers to serum gastrin, parietal cell antibodies and intrinsic factor antibodies tests. I might try asking for a serum gastrin test as this would be high if stomach acid is low.
Has anyone here who has chronic diarrhoea had a serum gastrin test done by their GP?