If you experience dramatically worse symptoms at night when attempting to sleep and therefore laying down flat, first: sleep on your left side. Due to the physics/geometry of the esophagus, sleeping with your left side facing down is the most helpful in terms of preventing acid from being able to work its way up the esophagus. Don't quite get why, but it just works.
Second, investing in a full length bed wedge that goes either under your mattress (and extends the entire length of the mattress from head to foot) or the same but as a memory foam topper, it really does alleviate the night time unable to sleep problem. I used one made by Avana comfort with a ton of success. The partial bed wedges or pillow bed wedges are too uncomfortable for me personally but the ones that go from head to foot at a gradual gentle incline are fine.
Figuring out dietary triggers is also a huge factor for many.
For me, I discovered if I eat any tomato at all, even tiny pieces - I will have acid reflux symptoms for like at least 12 hours. So I just don't it anymore except at a rate 11am lunch and even then I still often suffer.
For me, cutting out coffee is the other biggest solution, but I'm an addict and can't stop permanently, but I've found that cold brew (NOT hot brew over ice - aka many 'iced coffee' methods) - with specifically those labeled Dark Roast - to be the least aggravating (because both the cold brew extraction method and the darker roasts have a lower amount of acidity) and adding milk to make it less harsh as well, for me I do a 1:1 ratio between cold brew and almond milk, and finally only drinking it first thing in the morning as soon as possible after a breakfast, is fine.
I don't need the bed elevator/wedge if I follow my proper dietary alterations (barring certain late night alcohol situations).
Sleeping on my left side is what really helped me.
The esophagus approaches the stomach from the right side, then hooks in to meet it. When you sleep on your right side, and the sphincter muscle is weak, the fluid just goes down like a drain. When you sleep on your left side, even if the muscle is weak, the fluid would need to go up, or the stomach be entirely full, to get into the esophagus.
Second, investing in a full length bed wedge that goes either under your mattress (and extends the entire length of the mattress from head to foot) or the same but as a memory foam topper, it really does alleviate the night time unable to sleep problem. I used one made by Avana comfort with a ton of success. The partial bed wedges or pillow bed wedges are too uncomfortable for me personally but the ones that go from head to foot at a gradual gentle incline are fine.
Figuring out dietary triggers is also a huge factor for many.
For me, I discovered if I eat any tomato at all, even tiny pieces - I will have acid reflux symptoms for like at least 12 hours. So I just don't it anymore except at a rate 11am lunch and even then I still often suffer.
For me, cutting out coffee is the other biggest solution, but I'm an addict and can't stop permanently, but I've found that cold brew (NOT hot brew over ice - aka many 'iced coffee' methods) - with specifically those labeled Dark Roast - to be the least aggravating (because both the cold brew extraction method and the darker roasts have a lower amount of acidity) and adding milk to make it less harsh as well, for me I do a 1:1 ratio between cold brew and almond milk, and finally only drinking it first thing in the morning as soon as possible after a breakfast, is fine.
I don't need the bed elevator/wedge if I follow my proper dietary alterations (barring certain late night alcohol situations).