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That Constant Throat Clearing Isn't Allergies. It's Something Your Doctor Might Be Missing Entirely.
Hoarse Voice. Lump in Throat. Chronic Cough. This Isn't Normal Aging - It's Silent Reflux Damaging Your Throat From the Inside

You clear your throat 50 times a day. Your voice is strong in the morning but gone by dinner. There's a lump that won't go away no matter how many times you swallow. You have a cough that starts after meals and nobody - not your GP, not the allergist, not the ENT - can explain it.

You've tried allergy meds. Inhalers. Nasal sprays. Antibiotics. Nothing touches it.

Your family says you sound different. Your grandkids ask why your voice is "scratchy." You used to sing in the car. Now you can barely get through a phone call without clearing your throat.

Here's what nobody told you: you don't have allergies. You don't have a cold that won't go away. You have acid silently damaging your throat - and you may not have a single symptom of heartburn.

This condition is called Laryngopharyngeal Reflux (LPR) - also known as "silent reflux." It affects up to 10% of the population and causes over 50% of chronic hoarseness cases. Yet it remains one of the most misdiagnosed conditions in medicine [1].

Does This Sound Like You?
  • Constant throat clearing - 87% of LPR patients do this. It feels like mucus you can never get rid of. Allergy meds don't help because it's not allergies [2]
  • Hoarseness that gets worse through the day - your voice breaks mid-sentence, fades by afternoon, sounds raspy to everyone but you didn't notice it creeping in
  • A lump that won't go away - the globus sensation. You swallow but it stays. It's not a lump - it's inflamed tissue you can feel but your doctor can't see
  • A cough nobody can diagnose - dry, persistent, worse after meals. Inhalers are useless. You've been told it's post-nasal drip, but decongestants don't work either
  • Thick sticky mucus in your throat - "gunk" that won't clear. Not from your sinuses - from your esophagus producing excess mucus to protect itself from acid it was never built to handle
  • Difficulty swallowing - pills scraping, food feeling stuck, tightness when you eat. The passage is inflamed, not blocked
  • Morning soreness - waking with a raw, burning throat. Acid reached your voice box overnight while you slept

Here's the key: fewer than 20% of people with LPR ever feel classic heartburn [3]. That's why it's called "silent" reflux. The acid does its damage above the esophagus - in your throat, larynx, and airway - without triggering the burning sensation that would tell you it's reflux.

If you checked 3 or more symptoms above and heartburn is NOT your main complaint, you are likely dealing with silent reflux. And that changes everything about how it should be addressed.

Why Your Doctor Missed It - And Why Nothing You've Tried Has Worked

The average LPR patient sees multiple specialists and undergoes multiple tests in their first year - often without answers [4]. Here's why:

Your GI doctor looks at the wrong place. GERD damages the lower esophagus. LPR damages the throat, larynx, and airway - above where a standard endoscopy focuses. Your GI scope may come back "normal" because the damage is higher up.

Your ENT sees inflammation but can't find infection. They see redness and swelling in your larynx. They test for bacteria, viruses, allergies. Everything comes back negative. Because the damage is chemical, not infectious.

Your allergist treats what isn't there. The throat clearing and mucus look like allergies. But antihistamines, nasal sprays, and allergy shots don't help - because the trigger isn't pollen or dust. It's pepsin and acid from your stomach.

Your GP prescribes a PPI. It helps a little, maybe. But up to 40-50% of LPR patients don't respond adequately to PPIs [5]. Because the main agent of damage in LPR isn't just acid - it's an enzyme called pepsin that PPIs can't address.

Nothing touched the lump-in-throat feeling. Food felt stuck, my voice was hoarse, and lying flat was impossible. This is the first thing that actually soothed my esophagus. Within weeks, swallowing felt normal and my voice came back.
— Rafael G., Verified Customer
The Pepsin Problem: Why This Is Harder to Fix Than Regular Reflux

Here's the biology that changes everything about how LPR should be treated:

Your larynx - your voice box - has zero of the protective mechanisms your esophagus has. No acid-neutralizing enzymes. No thick barrier lining. No rapid clearing mechanism. Research shows that as few as 3 reflux episodes can cause laryngeal damage, while your esophagus can handle 50 per day [6].

But it gets worse. The main destroyer isn't acid alone - it's pepsin, a digestive enzyme from your stomach. When pepsin reaches your throat, it gets absorbed into your tissue and stays there [7]. Even after the reflux episode is over. Even when no acid is present.

The next time ANY acid touches your throat - even from food, a sip of coffee, or a mild reflux episode - that dormant pepsin reactivates and resumes destroying tissue from the inside.

This is why PPIs often fail for LPR:

  • PPIs reduce acid - but pepsin causes damage even in non-acid reflux
  • PPIs don't remove pepsin already embedded in your throat tissue
  • PPIs work on the stomach - they don't coat or protect the throat
  • LPR requires at least 6 months of treatment vs 8 weeks for typical GERD [8]
Why a Liquid You Sip Slowly Is the Only Format That Makes Sense for Silent Reflux

Think about this: LPR damages your throat. So why would you take a capsule that drops straight past your throat into your stomach?

EsoRepair was developed by a gastroenterologist specializing in esophageal mucosal health. It's a liquid formula you sip slowly. As it moves down, nano-sized particles of soothing botanicals coat the entire upper tract - including the throat, larynx, and upper esophagus where silent reflux does its damage.

This matters for LPR specifically because:

  • Marshmallow root and slippery elm form a mucilage layer that physically coats irritated laryngeal tissue on contact - soothing that raw, inflamed throat from the first sip
  • Sodium alginate creates a "raft" above stomach contents - and research shows alginates also inhibit pepsin and bile salts, addressing the non-acid damage that PPIs miss [9]
  • Hyaluronic acid and chondroitin sulfate form a protective film over pepsin-depleted tissue
  • Zinc-L-Carnosine adheres to damaged tissue and supports integrity during oxidative stress


The delivery format IS the differentiator. For a condition that damages the throat, you need a formula that actually reaches the throat.

Published Research on Key Ingredients

Alginates Block Pepsin

Research shows alginates inhibit pepsin AND bile salts - not just acid [9]

9 of 10 Soothed in 10 Min

Marshmallow root mucilage delivered rapid comfort in surveys [10]

60% Less Tissue Damage

Zinc-L-Carnosine protected tissue during oxidative stress [11]

53% Better Comfort

HA + chondroitin sulfate improved outcomes added to standard care [12]

*Results based on published studies of individual ingredients. Doses and forms may differ. Individual results vary. Not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

The 90-Day Protocol for Silent Reflux Recovery

LPR takes longer to resolve than regular reflux - clinical guidelines recommend a minimum of 3-6 months. Research shows 60% improvement at 3 months [13]. EsoRepair is designed as a 90-day structured protocol:

Weeks 1-3: The Coating Phase

Marshmallow root, slippery elm, and alginate begin coating upper esophageal and laryngeal tissue. Users report less throat clearing, smoother swallowing, and the "lump" starting to ease. 90% of marshmallow root users felt soothing within 10 minutes [10].

Weeks 4-6: The Repair Phase

Hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulfate, and glutamine support tissue maintenance in pepsin-depleted areas. Voice fatigue improves. Cough frequency decreases. Many users start trusting their voice again - holding conversations without clearing their throat every 30 seconds.

Weeks 7-9: The Resilience Phase

Aloe vera, DGL licorice, and quercetin support mucosal resilience and a healthy inflammatory response. Throat symptoms stabilize. The post-nasal drip sensation fades. The morning soreness that's been waking you up for months starts to quiet.

Weeks 10-12: The Renewal Phase

Your throat is functioning on a new baseline. Voice holds steady all day. The cough is quiet. The globus is gone. For many, this is the moment they realize the "allergy" they've had for years was never an allergy at all.

Backed by a 90-day money-back guarantee. If you don't see a meaningful difference, full refund.

From "Losing My Voice" to "Sounding Like Myself Again"

"Nothing touched the lump-in-throat feeling. Food felt stuck, my voice was hoarse, and lying flat was impossible. This is the first thing that actually soothed my esophagus. Within weeks, swallowing felt normal and my voice came back."

Rafael G.

"I went to the ER twice because the chest burn felt like heart issues. I'd wake up with acid in my mouth every morning and sleep sitting up. Four weeks in, I slept through the night for the first time in years. The panic and palpitations are finally quiet."

Maya P.

"These issues wrecked my mental health. I was terrified of every meal and living in constant flare-up fear. Two months in, I can eat without rehearsing disaster. I feel calmer, clearer, and like myself again."

Leah S.
Questions People With Silent Reflux Ask

"I don't have heartburn. Will this still help?"
EsoRepair was specifically designed to coat the upper esophageal and throat tissue - exactly where LPR causes damage. Most LPR patients don't have heartburn. That's exactly why a liquid delivery format that contacts throat tissue directly matters more than any capsule.

"My ENT put me on a PPI. Can I use both?"
Yes. PPIs reduce acid production. EsoRepair coats and supports the tissue that's already been damaged - and addresses pepsin, which PPIs don't touch. They work on different parts of the problem.

"How long before I notice a difference?"
LPR tissue heals slower than regular reflux. Clinical guidelines recommend 3-6 months. Most users report symptom improvement starting in weeks 2-4, with voice and cough improvements by weeks 4-6. The 90-day guarantee covers the full recovery window.

"It's expensive."
$1.63/day on subscription. LPR patients spend thousands on specialists, scopes, allergy meds, and inhalers that don't work - because nobody identified the real cause. 90-day money-back guarantee means zero risk.

"I don't want a subscription."
Cancel anytime. No commitments. Start with a single bottle.

ONLY NOW: Get Extra 30% Off
  • Doctor-formulated with 11 research-backed ingredients
  • Liquid nano delivery - coats throat and upper esophagus directly
  • Alginate inhibits pepsin on contact - not just acid
  • 90-day money-back guarantee
  • Save up to 58% on subscription (cancel anytime)

You've been told it's allergies. You've been told it's post-nasal drip. You've tried every spray and inhaler on the shelf. But your throat is still raw, your voice still fades, and the lump never goes away.

It's time to address what's actually happening: acid and pepsin damage to tissue that was never built to handle it. Try EsoRepair risk-free with 30% OFF.

References

[1] Lechien JR, et al. Laryngopharyngeal reflux. StatPearls / Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2023.
[2] O'Hara 2022. Throat clearing is highest-ranked LPR symptom at 87%.
[3] StatPearls. Heartburn in 20% of LPR vs 80% of GERD patients.
[4] PMC9012673. LPR patients see multiple specialists, undergo multiple tests in first year.
[5] El-Serag H, et al. Persistent reflux symptoms on PPI therapy. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2010.
[6] Koufman JA. Otolaryngologic manifestations of GERD. Laryngoscope. 1991.
[7] Johnston N, et al. Pepsin detected in laryngeal biopsies of LPR patients. Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol. 2007.
[8] Stanford LPR Protocol. Minimum 6-month treatment recommended.
[9] PMC9012673. Alginates inhibit pepsin and bile salts as adjunct to PPI therapy.
[10] Fink C, et al. Marshmallow root for irritative cough. Complement Med Res. 2018.
[11] Hayashi K, et al. Polaprezinc protects against esophagitis. Int J Clin Oncol. 2016.
[12] Savarino V, et al. HA and chondroitin sulfate in NERD. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2017.
[13] ScienceDirect 2020. 60% improvement in cough at 3 months of reflux treatment.

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