While gastroesophageal reflux disease or GERD cannot be cured by simple dietary changes, taking control of your diet and reducing your consumption of some of the most common heartburn and acid reflux triggers can potentially do wonders for your acid reflux symptoms. [Read more]
The number of people who are experiencing acid reflux is at an all-time high, while women seem to be developing the condition at an increasingly alarming rate. [Read more]
If you are struggling with Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis, another form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), then your general surgeon in Ft. Myers can help you overcome the physical symptoms of the disease. [Read more]
If you struggle with gastroesophageal reflux disease(GERD), then you may suffer from the severe discomfort and lingering pain of heartburn and acid reflux on a daily basis. [Read more]
Having Crohn’s Disease or ulcerative colitis makes dining difficult, but you can’t just give up eating after being diagnosed with IBD in Ft. Myers or Naples. [Read more]
As the rate of esophageal cancer in the United States goes up, there are some who identify obesity as the culprit behind the heartburn and acid reflux, and now studies are indicating that being obese could increase your risk of esophageal cancer. [Read more]
In what ways does your past impact your present dietary patterns? Your history is special to you. [Read more]
Medical weight loss programs are designed to give you everything you need to be successful with your weight loss program, from what you should be eating to how often you should be moving. The program puts everything you need right in front of you, but it still takes mental commitment on your part to keep up with it. [Read more]
If you look long and hard enough, you can find a weight loss program that will tell you exactly what you want to hear. There are programs that will have you exclusively drink milkshakes, and programs that will tell you not to exercise at all or risk being far too hungry to stick to your diet. [Read more]
If you are following your medical weight loss diet plan, exercising regularly and drinking the proper amount of water day in and out, then one or two cups of coffee a day might not be a problem—especially if it is that second cup of coffee that is giving you the energy to make it through your workout. [Read more]