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🩺Health & Conditions·10 min read

Silent Reflux (LPR): Why Your Throat Burns Without Heartburn

TL;DR

Silent reflux (LPR) sends stomach acid to your throat instead of staying in your esophagus, causing chronic cough and hoarseness without the typical heartburn warning sign.

🕓 Updated: 2026-05-23

This article is for general informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider with questions about a medical condition.

The Reflux That Doesn't Feel Like Reflux

You've cleared your throat 47 times today. Your voice sounds like you've been screaming at a concert, but you spent last night watching Netflix. The doctor says it might be reflux, but you're confused—where's the heartburn everyone talks about?

Welcome to silent reflux, medically known as laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR). It's called "silent" because it bypasses the burning chest sensation most people associate with acid reflux. Instead, it targets your throat, voice box, and airways. About 10% of patients visiting ENT clinics have LPR as their primary issue, according to research published in Laryngoscope in 2025. That's a lot of people wondering why their throat feels raw when their chest feels fine.

How LPR Takes a Different Path Than GERD

Picture your digestive system as a two-story house. GERD (gastroesophageal reflux disease) is like water damage on the first floor—acid splashes up into your esophagus, and you feel it immediately as heartburn. LPR is sneakier. It's water damage that somehow reaches the second floor while leaving the first floor dry.

Here's what happens: your lower esophageal sphincter (the valve between stomach and esophagus) might work reasonably well. But your upper esophageal sphincter—the one protecting your throat—doesn't. Acid and pepsin (a digestive enzyme) travel all the way up, often as a gas or mist rather than liquid. You might not feel anything in your chest because the acid isn't pooling there. It's going straight to your larynx.

The American Journal of Gastroenterology published findings in 2024 showing that 78% of LPR patients report minimal or no heartburn. Their esophagus looks normal on endoscopy. Traditional acid reflux medications sometimes help, sometimes don't. It's a different beast.

The Symptoms That Send People to the Wrong Specialist

A 43-year-old teacher visited her doctor five times in one year. Chronic cough that wouldn't quit. She saw a pulmonologist (lungs clear), an allergist (no allergies), and tried three different cough suppressants. The actual culprit? Pepsin deposits in her throat tissue causing inflammation every time she ate.

LPR symptoms cluster around the throat and airways:

Chronic throat clearing — that constant feeling of mucus you can't quite cough up. It's actually inflammation mimicking mucus.

Hoarseness or voice changes — especially worse in the morning. Your vocal cords have been marinating in acid all night.

Globus sensation — the feeling of a lump in your throat that isn't there. Swelling from acid damage creates this phantom obstruction.

Chronic cough — dry, persistent, often worse after meals or when lying down.

Post-nasal drip that isn't — you feel drainage, but your sinuses are clear.

Difficulty swallowing — not painful, just... effortful. Like food hesitates.

The 2025 Laryngoscope criteria for LPR now emphasize that patients need only two of these symptoms for clinical suspicion, even with zero heartburn. This marks a shift from older guidelines that required heartburn as a supporting symptom.

Why Your Throat Can't Handle What Your Esophagus Tolerates

Your esophagus has dealt with occasional acid exposure since you were born. It has protective mechanisms—mucus barriers, rapid cell turnover, bicarbonate secretion. Not perfect, but functional.

Your larynx and throat? They're not built for this. Research shows that laryngeal tissue sustains damage at pH levels that esophageal tissue shrugs off. Three episodes of acid reaching your throat per week can cause significant inflammation. Your esophagus might need dozens of episodes before showing wear.

There's another factor: pepsin. This stomach enzyme activates in acidic environments but doesn't disappear when things turn neutral. It binds to throat tissue and reactivates whenever you eat or drink something slightly acidic—tomato sauce, orange juice, wine. The 2024 gastroenterology research identified pepsin in throat tissue biopsies of 89% of LPR patients, even when tested hours after their last reflux episode. It's essentially a time bomb waiting for the next acidic trigger.

The Timing Problem: Why LPR Happens When It Does

GERD sufferers often notice symptoms at night or after large meals. LPR follows different patterns.

Morning hoarseness is classic. You've been horizontal for hours, and gravity wasn't helping keep acid down. Your throat absorbed the damage while you slept.

Post-meal symptoms appear 30-60 minutes after eating—not immediately. The stomach takes time to ramp up acid production. By the time you're clearing dishes, your upper sphincter is dealing with the surge.

Stress makes it worse, but not through the mechanism most people assume. Stress doesn't directly increase acid production significantly. What it does is alter swallowing patterns and increase air swallowing (aerophagia), which can push stomach contents upward. A 2024 study tracking 312 LPR patients found that reported stress levels correlated more strongly with symptom severity than with measured acid exposure.

What Actually Works (And What Doesn't)

Standard GERD treatment—a daily PPI like omeprazole—helps about 50-60% of LPR patients. That leaves a lot of people still symptomatic. Why?

PPIs reduce acid production. They don't eliminate pepsin, and they don't strengthen your upper esophageal sphincter. If your primary damage comes from pepsin reactivation or mechanical reflux of non-acidic stomach contents, acid suppression alone won't solve it.

What the research supports:

Twice-daily PPI dosing (before breakfast AND before dinner) outperforms once-daily dosing for LPR. The 2025 Laryngoscope guidelines now recommend this as first-line treatment, noting that 73% of responders needed the split dose rather than a single morning dose.

Dietary modification targeting pepsin reactivation: avoiding foods below pH 5 (citrus, tomatoes, vinegar, wine, carbonated drinks) for 2-4 weeks while tissue heals. This isn't about reducing acid production—it's about not waking up the pepsin already in your throat.

Elevating the head of your bed 6-8 inches. Not just extra pillows (which can actually worsen reflux by bending your abdomen). Actual bed elevation using blocks or a wedge under the mattress.

Not eating within 3 hours of lying down. This one's boring but effective. Your stomach empties significantly in that window.

What doesn't have strong evidence:

Alkaline water as a primary treatment. One small study showed benefits; larger follow-ups didn't replicate them. It won't hurt, but it's not a solution.

Apple cider vinegar. The theory that "more acid helps" contradicts the basic mechanism of LPR. Some people swear by it; controlled trials don't support it.

When to Escalate Beyond Lifestyle Changes

Give conservative treatment 8-12 weeks. That's longer than GERD typically requires because throat tissue heals slower than esophageal tissue. If you're not improving:

Transnasal esophagoscopy can visualize your throat and upper esophagus in an office visit, no sedation required. Your doctor looks for the telltale signs: redness and swelling of the arytenoids (structures near your vocal cords), cobblestoning of the throat tissue, thick mucus pooling.

pH monitoring with impedance testing measures both acid and non-acid reflux events over 24-48 hours. This is the gold standard for confirming LPR when symptoms persist despite treatment. The 2024 gastroenterology guidelines recommend this before considering surgery or long-term high-dose PPI therapy.

Surgical options (fundoplication) exist but are reserved for severe, confirmed cases that fail medical management. Success rates for LPR surgery are lower than for classic GERD—around 65-70% symptom improvement versus 85-90% for GERD.

Living With LPR: The Long Game

Many people manage LPR effectively with lifestyle modifications alone after an initial treatment period. The throat heals, pepsin clears out, and careful eating habits prevent recurrence.

Others need ongoing low-dose PPI therapy. The risks of long-term PPI use (bone density, kidney function, nutrient absorption) exist but are modest for most people. They need to be weighed against the risks of chronic throat inflammation, which include a small but real increased risk of laryngeal cancer with decades of untreated LPR.

Tracking your triggers helps. Keep a simple log for two weeks: what you ate, when you ate it, and symptom severity the next morning. Patterns emerge. Maybe it's the wine. Maybe it's eating dinner at 9 PM. Maybe it's the tomato sauce you put on everything. The data tells you what your body can't.

Silent reflux is frustrating precisely because it doesn't announce itself clearly. But once you understand that your throat and your esophagus play by different rules, the management strategy starts making sense. Your throat isn't being dramatic. It's just not equipped for the chemical assault your esophagus learned to tolerate.

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📊 Key Stats

78%
LPR patients with minimal/no heartburn
American Journal of Gastroenterology, 2024
10%
ENT clinic patients with LPR as primary issue
Laryngoscope, 2025
89%
LPR patients with pepsin in throat tissue
American Journal of Gastroenterology, 2024
73%
LPR responders requiring split-dose PPI
Laryngoscope, 2025
65-70%
LPR surgery symptom improvement rate
Laryngoscope, 2025

LPR vs. GERD: Key Differences

FeatureSilent Reflux (LPR)Classic GERD
Primary symptom locationThroat, larynx, airwaysChest, lower esophagus
Heartburn presenceMinimal or absent (78%)Usually present
Typical timingMorning, 30-60 min post-mealNighttime, immediately post-meal
Endoscopy findingsOften normal esophagusEsophageal erosion common
PPI response rate50-60%80-90%
Primary damage mechanismPepsin + acid mistLiquid acid pooling
Recommended PPI dosingTwice daily (split dose)Once daily usually sufficient

Understanding these differences explains why standard GERD treatment often falls short for LPR patients.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you have silent reflux without any digestive symptoms at all?
Yes. Many LPR patients have zero heartburn, no chest discomfort, and no obvious digestive complaints. Their only symptoms are throat-related: chronic cough, hoarseness, throat clearing, or globus sensation. This is why LPR often gets misattributed to allergies, post-nasal drip, or anxiety before the correct identification.
Why doesn't my regular antacid help my throat symptoms?
Antacids neutralize acid already in your stomach or esophagus, but they don't address pepsin that's already bound to your throat tissue. That pepsin reactivates whenever you eat or drink something acidic, even if your stomach acid is controlled. LPR management requires both acid suppression AND dietary changes to prevent pepsin reactivation.
How long does it take for LPR throat damage to heal?
Laryngeal tissue heals more slowly than esophageal tissue. Most treatment guidelines recommend 8-12 weeks of consistent therapy before evaluating response, compared to 4-8 weeks for classic GERD. Some patients notice improvement within 2-3 weeks; others need the full treatment course before symptoms resolve.
Is silent reflux worse at night even without heartburn?
Often yes. Lying flat removes gravity's help in keeping stomach contents down. You may not feel heartburn because acid travels as a mist directly to your throat rather than pooling in your esophagus. Morning hoarseness and throat discomfort are classic signs of nighttime LPR, even when you sleep through it.
Can stress cause silent reflux or just make it worse?
Stress doesn't significantly increase stomach acid production, but it does alter swallowing patterns and increase air swallowing, which can push stomach contents upward. Studies show stress levels correlate more with symptom severity than with actual measured acid exposure—meaning stress amplifies how much LPR bothers you and may mechanically worsen reflux events.
Should I avoid coffee if I have LPR?
Coffee is mildly acidic (pH around 5) and can relax the lower esophageal sphincter. During the initial healing phase (first 2-4 weeks of treatment), avoiding coffee may help. Long-term, some people tolerate coffee fine while others find it triggers symptoms. Track your individual response rather than following blanket restrictions.
What's the difference between LPR and post-nasal drip?
They feel remarkably similar—both cause throat clearing, mucus sensation, and cough. The key difference: true post-nasal drip comes with sinus congestion, visible mucus, and responds to antihistamines or decongestants. LPR creates the sensation of mucus through inflammation, but your sinuses are clear and allergy medications don't help. Many people are treated for allergies for months before LPR is considered.

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