So when you have silent reflux, you can indeed have something like a lump in your throat – a lump of swollen tissue. Inflammation causes swelling of your mucus membranes. Some people feel like they have a lump in their throat, or like something is stuck there. 5) Globus Syndrome (lump in the throat sensation) This is why silent refluxers with a chronic cough are usually not getting the correct diagnosis easily.
There are simply so many diseases that can cause a cough. It is very hard for a doctor to tell if a chronic cough is caused by reflux. This irritation can cause a cough and throat clearing as well. This stems from damages in your lungs.Īlso, LPR hits the mucous membrane in your airways. In the same way that silent reflux can cause asthma, it can also make you cough. Problems while breathing in sounds more like a silent reflux symptom. If breathing out is the hard part, then this speaks for asthma. It is important to look at whether people have trouble breathing out or in. 3) Asthma-Like SymptomsĮxperts have started to proclaim that many patients who are treated for asthma actually have reflux. So it is no wonder that a lot of patients have issues there. 2) Sore ThroatĪn inflamed and painful throat is as common as laryngitis for LPR.Įvery reflux shoots up your esophagus and then into your throat. So, if reflux hits the lungs, we can have trouble with our voice as well. They have to deliver a sufficient and stable airflow to speak correctly. That is pretty much the same as back pain from sitting in a bad position for too long – just that we have pain around the larynx and throat.Īlso, we need our lungs to speak. The muscles can cause problems and can get tense from speaking. It might be harder to understand us, or we will be in pain while talking. If this area between the mouth and nose is inflamed, we will have trouble speaking.
Our palate, for example, is needed to create most hard consonants like “c” and “p”. So even if our larynx is fine, other areas can cause trouble with speaking. The inflamed larynx “just” hinders the speaking muscles from working correctly.Īlso, other parts of our throat and airways are part of our voice. The voice itself can sound mostly normal. As long as the vocal cords are fine, this instead causes pain and trouble while speaking. We get the most problems when the vocal cords are inflamed, as those are the basis of our voice.īut often, only the entry area of the larynx is inflamed. So even minor inflammation can cause serious voice issues. At the same time, our voice reacts strongly to any disturbance.
The larynx is very close to the esophagus and any potential reflux. Laryngitis is a very common silent reflux symptom. It is no wonder that another name for silent reflux is laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR). Here are the most common symptoms of silent reflux: 1) Hoarseness and Pain While Speaking (often caused by reflux laryngitis) They are directly or indirectly caused by inflammation, which are the result of damages from pepsin. There is a whole range of silent reflux symptoms.