If you are anxious/stressed/depressed and accompanied by symptoms of stomach discomfort such as belching/burping/bloating/early satiety, you can consider whether you have functional dyspepsia.
Common symptoms of functional dyspepsia:
Symptom 1: Full after meals.
Postprandial satiety refers to feeling full of upper abdomen after eating for a period of time because the food still stays in the stomach.
Symptom 2: Early satiety
Maybe everyone can't understand the meaning of early satiety, which means that when we don't eat any food, we won't feel hungry from morning till night, and we will feel that our stomachs are full, and then our personal appetite begins to decrease and weaken.
Symptom 3: Abdominal flatulence
Abdominal flatulence refers to the feeling of abdominal distension, which may be accompanied by abdominal sound, increased exhaust or frequent belching.
Symptom 4: Stomach retention.
This phenomenon means that patients always feel faint pain in their upper abdomen in daily life, but they can't specify where it is. After we finish eating, this pain will be obviously aggravated, accompanied by nausea, vomiting and even abdominal distension.
Symptom 5: Mental anxiety and headache.
This is a complication of functional dyspepsia, because after intestinal indigestion for a long time, the body will become worse and worse, and the overall physical quality of patients will begin to weaken, and various intestinal problems and immune problems will gradually emerge, leading to psychological panic and high-intensity stress in patients. Affected by these factors, our patients will begin to have obvious mental anxiety, strong pain, and even memory loss and insomnia.
Treatment: The main purpose is to relieve symptoms and improve the quality of life of patients.
General treatment: maintain a happy mood, establish good living and eating habits, and avoid triggers; Psychotherapy can be carried out appropriately, and those with insomnia and anxiety can receive corresponding drug treatment.
Symptomatic treatment: drugs for inhibiting gastric acid, such as PPI (omeprazole), etc.; Gastrointestinal motility promoting drugs, aiming at gastrointestinal motility-like drugs, such as domperidone; Digestive drugs, such as various digestion tablets.