Vitamins Can Help Regulate Stomach Acid
Dieticians recommend vitamin supplements to control stomach acid now that Zantac is recalled and off of the market
Saturday, February 27, 2021 - Dieticians and doctors are now recommending that people with heartburn and acid reflux who can no longer find their preferred brand of medicine change their diet and add vitamins and other supplements. Doctors also recommend that those who can no longer find Zantac take quick-acting antacids that may offer temporary relief. Fast-acting antacids include over-the-counter Maalox, Mylanta, Rolaids, and Tums.
Individuals have developed stomach, bladder, colon, and other cancer allegedly by taking Zantac contaminated with NDMA. Many are filing lawsuits that charge Sanofi, the maker of Zantac, of failing to warn them of what they knew or were obligated to know about Zantac deteriorating to form the compound. The FDA has recalled and banned the sale of all types of ranitidine including the best-selling Zantac. The government health agency fears Zantac may have expired on the shelf due to high temperatures that may have changed their chemical structure into a carcinogen.
HealthLine.com cites recently published research that indicates that taking regular doses of vitamin supplements can help balance stomach acid, helping to alleviate heartburn and acid reflux pain. According to Health Line, "Some research suggests that B vitamins, including folate, riboflavin, and vitamin B6, may help treat acid reflux. One study found that increased intake of several B vitamins was associated with a lower risk of reflux esophagitis, a condition characterized by inflammation in the esophagus often caused by acid reflux. What's more, greater intakes of folate and vitamin B6 were linked to a lower risk of esophagus cancer and a condition called Barrett's esophagus, both of which are potential complications of long-term GERD." This is great news as most vitamins mentioned above are easily available at drug stores or supermarkets.
Taking vitamins may not only help alleviate heartburn pain but can also increase energy levels leading to exercising more. One of the easiest ways to exercise more is to download a Steps app on a smartphone and walk ten thousand steps every day. Walking every day and eating double the fruits and vegetables that you ordinarily would have puts a person on the right trajectory to naturally eliminating the need for Zantac or other antacid medicines.
As previously mentions, Zantac and other forms of ranitidine were removed from the market because online drug testing pharmacy Valisure discovered levels of carcinogenic NDMA orders of magnitude greater than the 96 NGS per table that the FDA had established as the safe threshold. People allege that taking Zantac regularly and for many years has caused cancer of the stomach, bladder, colon, intestines, prostate, breast, and many other forms of the disease. NDMA is a compound believed to be benign in low doses but can multiply to carcinogenic levels due to high drug storage temperatures or when it interacts with nitrates in the stomach. Nitrates are meat preservatives found, ironically, in the food that causes us to reach for a Zantac in the first place.
More Recent Heartburn MedicineLawsuit News:
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- Zantac Cancer Lawsuits Could Hinge On The Validity of Ranitidine Testing Methods | 7/11/2022
- Zantac Cancer Bellwether Trials In California Could Set The Stage For A Global Settlement Offer | 7/5/2022
- The FDA Recommended Protein Pump Inhibitor Drugs Like Prilosec And Nexium That May Damage Health More Than Zantac | 6/23/2022
- Truck Drivers, Firefighters, and Police Officers May Have Taken More Zantac Than People In Other Occupations | 6/20/2022
- Scientists Are Expected To Confirm That Ranidine Causes Gastrointestinal Cancer With Slam Dunk Testimony | 6/9/2022
- Scientific Hearings Will Start This September To Interview Zantac Cancer Expert Witnesses | 5/19/2022
- A Whistleblower Scientist Working For A Chinese Company Thinks NDMA Contamination Started In China | 5/12/2022
- Valisure's String Of Stunning Success Casts Doubt On The FDAs Ability To Police The Health Care Market | 5/2/2022
- Zantac Testing Accusations Heat Up With FDA Investigation Of Online Prescription Drug Testing Lab | 4/25/2022
- Study Finds Ranitidine Degrades Into 10,000 Nanograms of NDMA When Introduced To Simulated Stomach Conditions | 4/6/2022
- Potential Zantac Expert Witnesses Are Being Questioned By Zantac Defense Attorneys | 3/31/2022
- The FDA Requires That Drug Companies Regularly Test Ranitidine And Other Drug For NDMA | 3/24/2022
- Update: Where The Zantac Cancer Multidistrict Litigation (MDL) Stands Today | 3/12/2022
- Zantac Cancer Plaintiffs Look To The First Trial In October In Alameda California | 3/11/2022
- Zantac Cancer Plaintiffs Have Until June 30 To Finalize Their Claim | 3/7/2022
- Zantac Bellwether Trials May Focus On Ranitidine Testing Methods That Could Cause NDMA To Accelerate | 3/1/2022
- Valisure LLC's Motivations And Ranitidine Testing Methods May Not Be Scrutinized Before Trial | 2/24/2022
- Zantac Lawsuits May Go To Trial In California In October Of This Year | 2/18/2022
- Sanofi's History Of Reprehensible Corporate Behavior May Bolster Zantac Cancer Lawsuits | 2/10/2022
Lawyers for Zantac Heartburn Medicine Lawsuits
OnderLaw, LLC is a St. Louis personal injury law firm handling serious injury and death claims across the country. Its mission is the pursuit of justice, no matter how complex the case or strenuous the effort. The Onder Law Firm has represented clients throughout the United States in pharmaceutical and medical device litigation such as Pradaxa, Lexapro and Yasmin/Yaz, where the firm's attorneys held significant leadership roles in the litigation, as well as Actos, DePuy, Risperdal and others. The Onder Law Firm has won more than $300 million in four talcum powder ovarian cancer lawsuits in St. Louis. Law firms throughout the nation often seek its experience and expertise on complex litigation.