Sjogrens Disease and severe mouth dryness
Posted , 8 users are following.
I have sSjogrens ad have for many years now. The other night I was eating and I alway drink before I take a bite of food. I started to eat and began choking on my food which got into my esophagus. It was stuck.i tried to get it to go down and tried to get it out. No luck. I was scared to death and in a panic. I called 911. Heard the sirens and said tis that for me? Yes the paramedics were there they took me to th ER at the hospital. They tried o give me two shots and a nito under my tongue. This was to relax the esophagus. That didn't work so ER doc called in an anatesologist to put me out and a gastrointestinal doctor to do an endoscopy. It was now 5 1/2 hours I was sure I was going to die. I was so so scared. It was sourdough bread. It was so good. But I will never eat it again . I have tried evovox and salavart but had side effects so had to stop takin. I dont kow what to do unless I eat only soft foods. Does anyone have this problem or suggestion for what I can do. I dont want to become paranoid of food because it was so bad. I welcome any help
Thank you kristyk
1 like, 49 replies
lily65668 kristyk
Posted
When it happens to me I just keep calm and take very small sips of water. Not large quantities, as it could back up and choke me. And I stop eating of course. I've always tended to eat too quickly, and have to remind myself to go very slowly when eating bread, taking small mouthfuls and chewing it well before swallowing. But I sometimes forget. Hopefully your experience will serve as a cautionary tale for me next time I'm eating bread!
That's about all the advice I can offer. It must have been a very scary experience. Hopefully others on this forum will have more input.
kristyk lily65668
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jennifer09136 kristyk
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kristyk jennifer09136
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God bless you
Kristyk
jennifer09136 kristyk
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jordan58854 kristyk
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kristyk jordan58854
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God bless u
Kristyk
lily65668 jordan58854
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shaq26875 lily65668
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aitarg35939 shaq26875
Posted
Tons of non-Sjogren's folk have these exact problems - well, except for that web thing, never heard of that before now. People with bad GERD and/or hiatal hernia and/or aging esophagi are advised to avoid bread, especially any form of white bread, plus white rice and all alcohol. Tho I love it, sourdough is the worst for me because of both the texture and the effect of that sour in my stomach. That feeling which I call rock-in-the-chest (or sometim as if the stomach-intestine opening got sealed off) can be a sign of gallbladder issues. The water coming back up is also akin to reflux.
All of these problems exist independently of or alongside ss. Ditto for the aging esophagus, which becomes both less pliable and harder to keep open. The barium swallow can diagnose this. If necessary, they can do a little stretching technique under light anesthetic. This may have to be repeated occasionally.
With all of these, one also may want to question what immediately preceded that bite of bread. If it was any drink as cool as 55°F - which probably includes tap or room temp in much of Europe, year round, that can trigger a spasm in the throat/esophagus. If the sips consumed post-issue are similarly cool, they can compound the problem.
So yes, prevention is key, both in the form of avoiding trigger foods/alcohol/cold drinks, and in learning to chew our foods down to pablum consistency. When I read that almonds needed to be chewed at least 25 times I rolled my eyes and said, "yeah, right!" They are crucial to my cholesterol control, can't take statins. But here we are, many years later and I now chew those nuts about 40 times.
The more one chews each mouthful, the more apt we are to get anything out of our pathetic salivary glands, but also the more one prepares the stomach. Further in terms of avoidance is reducing the amount of food we put in our mouths before we start chewing. Smaller bites are less apt to provoke problems, and to resolve more quickly if there is a problem. Drinking a little warm water with a small amount of lemon juice right before eating may help, too.
Believe it or not, we are fortunate. Think of all the folk over 40 who've died from choking on food before now, versus having the options we have in terms of emergency services, knowledge and medicine. Of course that's zero comfort in the midst of a terrifying event!
Oh yes: a small amount of bitters right before eating might help, solo or in some warm water. (Sigh ,,, it's so much more fun to consume the bitters in a cocktail ,,, sigh)
kristyk aitarg35939
Posted
esophagus etc. I have most of those problems that just coexist with each other. Thank you for explaining it the way you did. It has helped me in how my eating habits will now change. I am also taking all of this info with me when I see my doctor before my barium xray. I really thank all of you involved in this forum for all your help. It means so much. God bless all of you
aitarg35939 kristyk
Posted
(And of course this evening I gave myself a hard time with a buttermilk waffle ;-) )
lily65668 aitarg35939
Posted
I think all of your suggestions are helpful. In my case, it's taking in smaller mouthfuls that is the most effective, as well as waiting till one mouthful has gone down before taking another one. I'm sure all this will seem perfectly obvious to most people, but I'm afraid I've always been a bit of a greedy-guts, eating my food much too fast. I've had to learn a whole new way of eating since the age of about 50!
aitarg35939 lily65668
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jordan58854 kristyk
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shaq26875 jordan58854
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Doesnt seem to bother my 88 yr old mother or my older siblings in their late 60s