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Rumination syndrome is a rare behavioral problem. It affects children and some adults. Rumination syndrome causes an automatic regurgitation of recently eaten food. Someone with this problem will often eat meals normally. But after about 10 to 15 minutes, undigested food comes back up into the mouth from the food pipe (esophagus). This may continue for about 1 to 2 hours. The person may rechew and reswallow the food. Or they may spit it out. Often this happens at every meal, day after day. Rumination is a reflex, not a conscious action.
Rumination syndrome is a rare problem. But it may be underdiagnosed because it is mistaken for another problem.
Rumination is most often diagnosed in children. But it's also diagnosed in adults.
Experts think rumination is unconscious. But they also believe that the voluntary muscle relaxation of the diaphragm becomes a learned habit. It's similar to the typical belching reflex. But rather than burping up gas, the reflex causes actual food to come back up.
Rumination is different from throwing up. With rumination, the food is undigested. It often still tastes the same as when it was first eaten.
The symptoms of rumination syndrome may look like other health conditions or problems. Always talk with your doctor for a diagnosis.
Throwing up is much more common than rumination. So rumination syndrome is often misdiagnosed as a vomiting disorder such as delayed digestion (gastroparesis) or heartburn (GERD or gastroesophageal reflex disease).
To diagnose rumination, doctors need to ask the right questions. For instance, asking what the food tastes like when it comes up is important. If it still tastes good, this means the food was not digested. This means that rumination syndrome is a good possibility. Vomited food has been digested and often is not kept in the mouth.
The symptoms of rumination syndrome don't get better with typical treatment of reflux.
Treatment will depend on your symptoms, age, and general health. It will also depend on how severe the condition is.
There currently aren't any medicines available that effectively treat rumination syndrome. The best way to stop it is to relearn how to eat and digest food correctly. This requires diaphragmatic breathing training.
A behavioral psychologist often teaches this, and it's easy to learn. The method has to be used at the start of every meal to avoid regurgitation. Over time, most people can master the breathing method. This will stop the bad symptoms of rumination syndrome.
Experts aren't sure why rumination syndrome starts in the first place. So it's unclear what can be done to prevent it.
The good news about rumination syndrome is that it doesn't seem to do much physical damage. In rare cases, it can cause problems with the esophagus from the acid and reflux. In some teens and adults, it has caused a small amount of weight loss.
Work with your doctor or your child's doctor to know the symptoms. Then work with a behavioral psychologist to end the pattern.
Contact your doctor if:
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