Overview
Burping — medically termed eructation or belching — is the body's natural mechanism for expelling swallowed air from the upper digestive tract. Every person burps; it is a normal physiological process that occurs several times a day, particularly after meals. However, when burping becomes excessive, frequent, or accompanied by discomfort, bloating, or abdominal pain, it can indicate underlying digestive issues that require attention.
In India, where dietary habits often include gas-producing foods like legumes, lentils (dal), cauliflower, spicy preparations, and carbonated beverages, complaints of excessive burping are exceptionally common. Indian cuisine, rich in fibre and complex carbohydrates, naturally produces more intestinal gas during digestion. Add to this the common practice of eating quickly, talking while eating, and consuming aerated drinks at meals, and you have a perfect recipe for excessive belching.
While occasional burping is harmless, chronic or excessive burping can be embarrassing, socially uncomfortable, and sometimes a sign of deeper digestive disorders such as acid reflux (GERD), gastritis, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), or helicobacter pylori infection. Understanding what causes burping is the first step toward finding effective relief.
Homeopathy offers a gentle, individualised approach to treating excessive burping by addressing the root cause rather than merely suppressing the symptom. Rather than using antacids or simethicone-based preparations that temporarily break up gas bubbles, homeopathic remedies work by improving digestive function, reducing gas formation, and correcting the underlying digestive weaknesses that lead to excessive belching.
In this comprehensive guide, we explore the science of burping, the common causes of excessive belching, and the most effective homeopathic remedies for natural, lasting relief.
The Science of Burping: How and Why We Belch
The Mechanics of Belching
Burping is primarily caused by the accumulation of air in the stomach (a condition called gastric distension). When the stomach expands with swallowed air or gas produced during digestion, the lower oesophageal sphincter (LOS) — the muscular valve that separates the oesophagus from the stomach — relaxes temporarily, allowing the gas to escape upward through the oesophagus and out of the mouth.
The average healthy adult swallows approximately 2–3 litres of air per day, mostly during eating and drinking. This air, called aerophagia, accumulates in the stomach and is released through belching. The volume of air swallowed increases significantly when:
- Eating or drinking too quickly
- Chewing gum or sucking on hard candies
- Drinking carbonated beverages
- Smoking or using a straw
- Wearing loose dentures
- Experiencing anxiety or stress (which can cause frequent swallowing)
- Postnasal drip (which triggers swallowing of air with mucus)
Gas Production in the Digestive Tract
Beyond swallowed air, gas is also produced in the digestive tract through two main processes:
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Fermentation in the Small and Large Intestine: When undigested carbohydrates, fibre, and certain sugars reach the colon, gut bacteria ferment them, producing hydrogen, methane, and carbon dioxide. This is a normal part of digestion, but excessive fermentation due to poor digestion, bacterial overgrowth, or dietary factors can produce excessive gas.
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Neutralisation of Stomach Acid: When stomach acid (hydrochloric acid) enters the small intestine and mixes with bicarbonate from the pancreas, carbon dioxide gas is produced. This is a normal chemical reaction, but it can contribute to belching, especially after large meals.
Burping vs. Flatulence
It is important to distinguish between burping (upper GI gas expelled through the mouth) and flatulence (lower GI gas expelled through the rectum). Burping typically occurs within minutes to an hour after eating and is primarily caused by swallowed air. Flatulence occurs later, typically 2–6 hours after eating, and is caused by bacterial fermentation in the colon. Conditions that cause excessive burping do not necessarily cause excessive flatulence, and vice versa.
Common Causes of Excessive Burping
1. Dietary Factors
The most common cause of excessive burping is diet. Certain foods and eating habits produce more gas than others. In the Indian context, the following dietary factors are particularly relevant:
Gas-Producing Foods Commonly Consumed in India:
- Legumes and Pulses: Dal, chana (chickpeas), rajma (kidney beans), chole, lobia (black-eyed peas) — these contain complex sugars called oligosaccharides that the human body cannot fully digest, leading to fermentation in the colon
- Cruciferous Vegetables: Cauliflower (phool gobhi), cabbage (patta gobhi), broccoli, Brussels sprouts — these contain raffinose, another complex sugar that produces gas
- Onions and Garlic: Rich in fructans, which are fermentable fibres that can produce significant gas
- Whole Grains: Wheat, oats, brown rice, bran — high fibre content increases gas production
- Spicy Foods: Indian spices like chilli, cumin, and asafoetida (hing) can irritate the digestive tract and increase gas in sensitive individuals
- Carbonated Beverages: Soft drinks, soda water, and beer introduce significant amounts of carbon dioxide gas into the stomach
- Fried and Fatty Foods: These delay stomach emptying, giving food more time to ferment and produce gas
Eating Habits That Increase Burping:
- Eating too quickly without chewing properly
- Talking while eating (swallowing more air)
- Drinking through a straw
- Consuming aerated drinks during meals
- Overeating or eating very large meals
- Eating late at night before sleeping
2. Functional Dyspepsia (Indigestion)
Functional dyspepsia, commonly called indigestion in India, is a condition characterised by recurring symptoms of upper abdominal pain, bloating, fullness, and belching without any identifiable organic cause. It affects approximately 10–20% of the Indian population and is one of the most common causes of excessive burping.
Symptoms of functional dyspepsia include:
- Excessive belching after meals
- Feeling uncomfortably full after eating only a small amount (early satiety)
- Bloating and distension of the upper abdomen
- Nausea or queasiness
- Heartburn or acid reflux
The exact cause is not well understood, but factors include impaired stomach accommodation (the stomach does not relax properly to receive food), delayed gastric emptying, heightened nerve sensitivity in the stomach lining, and psychological factors like stress and anxiety.
3. Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD)
GERD, commonly known as acid reflux or heartburn in India, occurs when stomach acid flows backward into the oesophagus, causing irritation and inflammation. Burping is a common symptom of GERD, often accompanied by:
- A burning sensation in the chest (heartburn), especially after eating
- Regurgitation of sour or bitter-tasting acid into the mouth
- Difficulty swallowing (dysphagia)
- Chronic cough or throat clearing
- Hoarseness of voice, especially in the morning
- Sensation of a lump in the throat (globus sensation)
In GERD, burping is often worse after meals, when lying down, or when bending forward. The belching in GERD may be accompanied by the sensation of acid coming up along with the gas.
4. Gastritis
Gastritis — inflammation of the stomach lining — is extremely common in India, often caused by helicobacter pylori infection, chronic use of NSAID painkillers (like ibuprofen, diclofenac), excessive alcohol consumption, or stress. Symptoms include:
- Gnawing or burning pain in the upper abdomen
- Nausea and vomiting
- Loss of appetite
- Excessive burping or belching
- Feeling of fullness after small meals
H. pylori infection, in particular, is widespread in India, affecting up to 50–70% of the population. This bacterial infection can cause chronic gastritis and significantly increase burping and bloating.
5. Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
IBS is a common functional gastrointestinal disorder affecting 10–15% of Indians, characterised by abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits (constipation, diarrhoea, or both). Excessive burping is a frequent complaint among IBS patients, particularly those with the bloating-predominant subtype.
IBS-related burping is often triggered by specific foods (dietary triggers vary widely between individuals), stress, hormonal changes, and certain medications. The burping in IBS is typically accompanied by abdominal discomfort, changes in stool frequency or consistency, and a feeling of incomplete evacuation.
6. Helicobacter Pylori Infection
H. pylori is a spiral-shaped bacterium that colonises the stomach lining and is a major cause of chronic gastritis, peptic ulcers, and even stomach cancer. In India, H. pylori infection is extremely prevalent, especially in regions with lower socioeconomic status and crowded living conditions.
Symptoms of H. pylori infection include:
- Excessive burping with a sour or rotten-egg smell
- Gnawing stomach pain that improves temporarily after eating
- Nausea and loss of appetite
- Unexplained weight loss
- Dark or tarry stools (in cases of bleeding ulcers)
H. pylori produces urease, an enzyme that breaks down urea into ammonia and carbon dioxide, contributing to excessive gas and belching.
7. Lactose Intolerance
Lactose intolerance is the inability to digest lactose, the sugar found in milk and dairy products. It is extremely common in the Indian population, affecting an estimated 60–70% of adults. When lactose-intolerant individuals consume milk, yoghurt, paneer, or other dairy products, undigested lactose passes into the colon, where bacteria ferment it, producing gas, bloating, diarrhoea, and burping.
Symptoms typically appear 30 minutes to 2 hours after consuming dairy and include:
- Excessive burping and flatulence
- Bloating and abdominal cramps
- Diarrhoea or loose stools
- Nausea
8. Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth (SIBO)
SIBO is a condition in which abnormally large numbers of bacteria colonise the small intestine, where bacterial populations are normally very low. These bacteria ferment food prematurely, producing large amounts of gas. SIBO is increasingly recognised as a common cause of excessive burping, bloating, and IBS-like symptoms.
Risk factors for SIBO include:
- Reduced stomach acid production (common with long-term antacid or PPI use)
- Impaired motility of the small intestine (common in diabetes, hypothyroidism)
- Structural abnormalities of the small intestine
- Immunodeficiency conditions
9. Psychological Factors
Stress, anxiety, and depression can significantly contribute to excessive burping through several mechanisms:
- Increased swallowing of air (aerophagia) during periods of anxiety
- Altered gut motility and sensitivity (the brain-gut axis)
- Increased stomach acid production
- Changes in eating habits (eating quickly when stressed, skipping meals)
Many people notice that their burping worsens during periods of emotional stress, work pressure, or family conflicts — a pattern that is very common in India's fast-paced urban lifestyle.
10. Medications
Certain medications can increase burping as a side effect:
- Antacids (ironically, some antacids can increase gas production)
- Metformin (used for diabetes)
- Antibiotics (which disrupt gut bacteria)
- NSAID painkillers (which can irritate the stomach lining)
- Laxatives
- Opioid pain medications (which slow down digestion)
Conventional Treatment for Excessive Burping
Before exploring homeopathic options, it is helpful to understand the conventional medical approach to burping:
Lifestyle and Dietary Modifications
- Eating slowly and chewing food thoroughly
- Avoiding carbonated beverages and chewing gum
- Reducing intake of gas-producing foods
- Walking after meals
- Quitting smoking
- Eating smaller, more frequent meals
- Avoiding straws when drinking
Over-the-Counter Medications
- Simethicone-based preparations (e.g., Gas-X, Meftal Gas): These work by breaking up gas bubbles but do not address the underlying cause
- Digestive enzyme preparations: These can help with digestion of specific foods (e.g., lactase for dairy, alpha-galactosidase for legumes)
- Activated charcoal tablets: May help absorb intestinal gas
Prescription Medications
- Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) like omeprazole, pantoprazole: For acid reflux and gastritis
- Prokinetic agents like domperidone, itopride: To improve gastric emptying and reduce bloating
- Antibiotics for H. pylori eradication: Triple or quadruple therapy with amoxicillin, clarithromycin, metronidazole, and a PPI
Limitations of Conventional Treatment
Many patients find that conventional treatments provide only temporary relief. Antacids and PPIs can actually worsen burping in some cases by reducing stomach acid (which is needed for proper digestion) and allowing bacterial overgrowth. Simethicone products treat the symptom but not the root cause. This is why an increasing number of Indians are turning to homeopathy for lasting relief from excessive burping.
Homeopathic Approach to Treating Burping
Homeopathy treats burping not as an isolated symptom but as a manifestation of an underlying digestive disturbance. The homeopathic approach begins with a detailed case analysis, considering:
- The quality of the burp: Is it empty (just air), sour, bitter, foul-smelling, or tasting of food?
- The timing: After meals, on an empty stomach, at night, or in the morning?
- Associated symptoms: Bloating, heartburn, nausea, abdominal pain, constipation, or diarrhoea?
- Modalities: What makes it better (warmth, lying down, passing gas) and what makes it worse (specific foods, stress, cold drinks)?
- Constitutional factors: The individual's overall health, temperament, digestive history, and stress levels
The Top Homeopathic Remedies for Burping
1. Carbo Vegetabilis (Carbo Veg)
Key Indications: Carbo Vegetabilis is the single most important remedy for excessive burping, particularly when the burping provides no relief. The patient feels tremendously bloated and distended after eating even small amounts of food, with the abdomen feeling tight, hard, and full of gas.
When to Use:
- Excessive burping with a sensation of heaviness and fullness in the stomach
- Burping that does not relieve the bloating or discomfort
- Rancid, sour, or foul-smelling burps that taste of food eaten hours ago
- Bloating so severe that clothes feel tight around the waist
- Aversion to fatty, rich foods (which make the burping worse)
- Weak digestion with burning sensations in the stomach
- Chronic cases where the patient feels faint or breathless from the bloating (diaphragm being pushed upward)
- Great exhaustion and fatigue accompanying digestive complaints
Modalities:
- Worse from: Fatty foods, rich food, overeating, lying down, warmth
- Better from: Belching (though it provides only temporary relief), fanning, cool air, loosening clothing
Potency and Dosage: Carbo Veg 30C, 2–3 pellets three times daily for acute episodes. For chronic cases, Carbo Veg 200C once weekly may be more appropriate under professional supervision.
2. Nux Vomica
Key Indications: Nux Vomica is the remedy of choice for burping caused by overindulgence — excessive food, alcohol, spicy food, coffee, or rich, fatty meals. It is particularly suited to the modern, stressed Indian professional who eats irregularly, works long hours, consumes too much tea or coffee, and drinks alcohol socially.
When to Use:
- Burping after a heavy meal, especially with rich, spicy, or fatty foods
- Sour, bitter burps with a burning sensation in the stomach
- Heartburn and acid reflux accompanying the burping
- Sensation of a lump in the stomach that will not digest
- Constipation with frequent, ineffective urging for stool
- Irritability, impatience, and sensitivity to noise, light, and odours
- Symptoms worse from mental exertion, stress, and anger
- Strong craving for stimulants (coffee, alcohol, spicy food) that paradoxically worsen symptoms
Modalities:
- Worse from: Overeating, spicy food, alcohol, coffee, mental exertion, cold
- Better from: Warmth, rest, evening time, sleeping
Potency and Dosage: Nux Vomica 30C, 2–3 pellets taken 30 minutes after meals for acute episodes. For chronic digestive complaints with a constitutional basis, Nux Vomica 200C or 1M may be prescribed by a qualified homeopath.
3. Lycopodium Clavatum (Lycopodium)
Key Indications: Lycopodium is one of the most prescribed remedies for digestive disorders in homeopathy. It is particularly indicated when burping is accompanied by bloating in the lower abdomen, excessive flatulence, and a sensation of tightness across the abdomen.
When to Use:
- Burping that tastes sour or bitter, with a sensation of fermentation in the abdomen
- Bloating and distension that appear within 3–4 hours after eating
- Symptoms worse between 4 PM and 8 PM (a classic Lycopodium timing)
- Craving for sweets and warm drinks that temporarily improve symptoms
- Feeling full after eating only a small amount of food
- Excessive flatulence with a musty or sour odour
- Chronic digestive problems accompanied by liver trouble (history of jaundice, hepatitis, or fatty liver)
- Right-sided abdominal complaints (pain under the right rib cage)
- Irritable, dictatorial personality who is anxious about health but hides it
Modalities:
- Worse from: 4–8 PM, warm food, starchy food, oysters, overeating
- Better from: Warm drinks, loosening clothing, passing gas, movement
Potency and Dosage: Lycopodium 30C, 2–3 pellets twice daily for chronic bloating with burping. Lycopodium 200C may be used for deep-seated digestive complaints.
4. China Officinalis (China or Cinchona)
Key Indications: China is the premier remedy for burping caused by excessive flatulence and bloating after eating fruits, legumes, or starchy foods. It is also indicated for burping associated with anaemia, weakness, and exhaustion from digestive losses.
When to Use:
- Excessive burping with loud, noisy belching that temporarily relieves bloating
- Distension of the abdomen with a sensation of tightness and pressure
- Burping after eating fruits, beans, lentils, cabbage, or starchy foods
- Weak, exhausted feeling after eating (digestion seems to drain all energy)
- Diarrhoea or loose stools accompanied by gas
- Sensitivity to touch or pressure on the abdomen
- Burping with a sour, bitter, or food-like taste
- Periodic or intermittent digestive complaints that recur regularly
Modalities:
- Worse from: Eating fruit, beans, cabbage, starchy food, touching the abdomen
- Better from: Passing gas, belching (provides temporary relief), warmth
Potency and Dosage: China 30C, 2–3 pellets after meals when bloating is severe. For chronic cases with anaemia and weakness, China Q (mother tincture), 10 drops in water twice daily, may be recommended.
5. Pulsatilla Nigricans (Pulsatilla)
Key Indications: Pulsatilla is a wonderful remedy for burping caused by rich, fatty, or creamy foods — with symptoms that change frequently and are better in open air. It is especially suited to those with a mild, emotional, or changeable temperament.
When to Use:
- Burping that tastes of food eaten hours ago (especially fatty food)
- Belching with a sensation of a lump in the throat (globus hystericus)
- No thirst during the digestive upset (a key Pulsatilla indicator)
- Symptoms worse after eating fatty, rich, or fried foods
- Burping accompanied by nausea and a heavy, loaded feeling in the stomach
- Constipation with a sensation of heaviness and inactivity
- Symptoms that change rapidly — what helps one day may not help the next
- Mild, weepy, emotional disposition who craves sympathy and company
Modalities:
- Worse from: Fatty food, rich food, warm room, evening time
- Better from: Open air, cold applications, slow walking, crying
Potency and Dosage: Pulsatilla 30C, 2–3 pellets after meals when indicated. A single dose often provides lasting relief in acute cases.
6. Argentum Nitricum (Arg Nit)
Key Indications: Argentum Nitricum is indicated for burping associated with anxiety, anticipation, and nervousness. It is particularly useful for students, public speakers, and professionals who develop excessive belching before exams, presentations, or important meetings.
When to Use:
- Burping triggered by nervousness, anticipation, or stage fright
- Loud, explosive belching that provides temporary relief
- Craving for sweets and sugar (which makes the burping worse)
- Bloating and flatulence accompanied by a sensation of a lump or splinter in the throat
- Diarrhoea accompanying episodes of nervousness
- Symptoms that are worse from mental exertion and better from eating (especially sweets)
Modalities:
- Worse from: Anticipation, stress, sweets, warm room
- Better from: Passing gas, cold air, pressure
Potency and Dosage: Argentum Nitricum 30C, 2–3 pellets taken before stressful events or as needed for nervous burping.
7. Robinia Pseudocacia (Robinia)
Key Indications: Robinia is a specific remedy for hyperacidity with sour burping and sour vomiting. It is indicated when the burps are strongly acidic and leave a burning sensation in the throat and mouth.
When to Use:
- Very sour, acidic burping that burns the throat
- Heartburn and acid reflux with burping
- Sour vomiting of curdled matter
- Excessive salivation accompanying the burping
- Headache associated with acidity
- Symptoms worse at night, especially when lying down
Potency and Dosage: Robinia Q (mother tincture), 5–10 drops in water before meals, or Robinia 30C for acute sour burping.
8. Natrum Carbonicum (Nat Carb)
Key Indications: Natrum Carb is a remedy for burping caused by the inability to digest carbohydrates, starches, and milk. It is indicated in individuals with generally weak digestion who feel exhausted after eating.
When to Use:
- Excessive burping and flatulence after eating bread, rice, potatoes, or milk
- Sour burps with a sensation of fermentation in the abdomen
- General weakness and exhaustion from digestive complaints
- Aversion to milk (which causes gas and diarrhoea)
- Anaemia and debility accompanying long-standing digestive problems
- Sensitivity to weather changes, especially before thunderstorms
Potency and Dosage: Natrum Carb 30C, 2–3 pellets after meals for chronic digestive complaints.
9. Asafoetida
Key Indications: Asafoetida (the spice hing) is a powerful homeopathic remedy for excessive burping with a sensation of upward pressure. The burps are often loud, empty, and accompanied by a sensation of a lump rising in the throat.
When to Use:
- Violent, noisy belching with a feeling of spasmodic constriction in the oesophagus
- Sensation of a lump in the throat that is not relieved by swallowing
- Bloated abdomen with excessive flatulence
- Hysterical or hypochondriacal individuals with digestive complaints
- Symptoms that come and go suddenly
Potency and Dosage: Asafoetida 30C, 2–3 pellets as needed for acute spasmodic belching.
10. Sulphuric Acid
Key Indications: Sulphuric Acid is indicated for burping associated with a weak, debilitated digestive system. The patient feels tremulous, weak, and exhausted, with burping that tastes of rancid or putrid material.
When to Use:
- Rancid, putrid burps that taste of rotten eggs or spoiled food
- Trembling and weakness accompanying digestive upset
- Craving for stimulants (alcohol, coffee) that worsen symptoms
- Burning sensation in the stomach with sour burping
- Early-morning diarrhoea or loose stools
Potency and Dosage: Sulphuric Acid 30C, 2–3 pellets after meals for chronic digestive weakness.
Diet and Lifestyle Recommendations for Reducing Burping
Foods to Avoid or Limit
- Carbonated beverages: Soft drinks, soda, beer — eliminate these entirely
- Gas-producing vegetables: Cauliflower, cabbage, broccoli, onions, garlic — cook them thoroughly to reduce gas-causing compounds
- Legumes: Dal, rajma, chana, chole — soak overnight, discard the water, and cook with ginger, cumin, or asafoetida to reduce gas formation
- Fried and fatty foods: Samosas, pakoras, parathas with ghee, deep-fried snacks — reduce intake significantly
- Spicy foods: Excessive chilli, garam masala — moderate spice levels
- Dairy products: If lactose intolerant, avoid milk, ice cream, and soft cheeses; try yoghurt (curd) which is better tolerated
- Raw foods: Raw salads, uncooked vegetables — switch to lightly cooked versions
Foods That Help Reduce Gas
- Fresh ginger: Chew a small piece before meals or drink ginger tea
- Fennel seeds (saunf): Chew a teaspoon after meals — a traditional Indian remedy for gas
- Cumin seeds (jeera): Add to cooking or drink jeera water
- Asafoetida (hing): Add a pinch to lentil dishes during cooking
- Ajwain (carom seeds): Chew a pinch after heavy meals
- Buttermilk (chaas): Drink spiced buttermilk between meals — contains probiotics that aid digestion
- Papaya: Contains papain, a digestive enzyme that helps break down protein
- Pumpkin and bottle gourd (lauki): Easy to digest and help reduce bloating
Lifestyle Modifications
- Eat mindfully: Chew each bite 20–30 times before swallowing
- Don't talk while eating: This significantly reduces swallowed air
- Smaller, more frequent meals: Eat 5–6 small meals instead of 3 large ones
- Walk after meals: A 10–15 minute walk after eating aids digestion
- Avoid lying down immediately after eating: Wait at least 2–3 hours before sleeping
- Manage stress: Practice yoga, pranayama (breathing exercises), or meditation — stress directly affects digestion
- Maintain regular meal times: Irregular eating disrupts digestive rhythms
- Stay hydrated: Drink warm water throughout the day (avoid ice-cold water with meals)
When to See a Doctor
While occasional burping is normal, you should consult a physician if:
- Burping is accompanied by severe or persistent abdominal pain
- You notice blood in your stool or black, tarry stools
- You experience unexplained weight loss
- Burping is accompanied by persistent vomiting or vomiting blood
- You have difficulty swallowing (dysphagia)
- The burping is associated with chest pain (which could be a sign of heart disease — seek emergency care)
- Symptoms persist despite lifestyle modifications and homeopathic treatment for more than 4–6 weeks
Conclusion
Burping, while often dismissed as a minor social inconvenience, can significantly impact quality of life when it becomes excessive or chronic. Understanding what causes burping is the first step toward finding effective, lasting relief. In most cases, the cause is a combination of dietary factors, eating habits, digestive weakness, and lifestyle stress — all of which are addressable through a holistic approach.
Homeopathy offers a safe, effective, and individualised solution for excessive burping. Rather than simply suppressing the symptom with antacids or gas-relief preparations, homeopathic remedies work by strengthening the digestive system, correcting the underlying imbalance, and providing lasting relief from gas, bloating, and belching.
The key to successful homeopathic treatment lies in matching the remedy to the individual's unique symptom picture. Whether it is Carbo Vegetabilis for bloating that does not improve with belching, Nux Vomica for the overindulgent lifestyle, or Lycopodium for bloating that peaks in the late afternoon, there is a homeopathic remedy suited to every type of burping.
For best results, consult a qualified homeopathic practitioner who can take a detailed case history and prescribe the most appropriate remedy and potency for your specific condition. Combined with dietary modifications and stress management, homeopathy can help you achieve a comfortable, gas-free digestive system and lasting relief from excessive burping.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Homeopathic remedies should be taken under the supervision of a qualified practitioner. If you have severe or persistent symptoms, please consult a physician.
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