What You Must Check If Your Epigastrium Feels Stiff and Heavy Like a Stone | Epigastric Discomfort
Table of Contents
|
“Doctor, my epigastrium keeps having a stabbing pain, and it feels as hard as a rock. Even if I eat a little, my stomach feels completely full, and my chest feels tight, making it hard to breathe. Could I possibly have stomach cancer?” |
Mr. E, a male office worker in his 40s, asked with a voice full of fear. He explained that he had been suffering from extreme stress for the past three months while working on an important project at his company. The epigastric pain worsened, and he was prescribed tranquilizers from a neuropsychiatry department, but the feeling of hardness in his epigastric area did not improve. He noted that these symptoms recurred even though he hadn't eaten particularly greasy foods.
A Rock-Hard Epigastrium: The 'Food' Issue Might Not Be the Problem?
Many people, when experiencing discomfort in their epigastrium, immediately think of simple indigestion or gastritis. Of course, hyperacidity or a lack of digestive enzymes can also be causes. However, as in Mr. E's case, if it accompanies physical symptoms like "hardness" and sensory symptoms like "difficulty breathing," separate from food-related issues, it might not simply be a problem of the stomach. In Traditional Korean Medicine, this is viewed as 'Qi stagnation (氣滯)', and the lump formed by the accumulation of Qi is called 'Phlegm accumulation (痰積)'.
|
Imagine your body as a movie. Stress is like a taut "bowstring." If this bowstring remains constantly tense, not only is energy consumed, but the muscles and nerves around the epigastrium, the body's central part, also become rigid. This is precisely the discomfort we feel as a "rock-hard" sensation. |
How Stress Creates a 'Knot' in Your Epigastrium
At the pit of the stomach, specifically below the xiphoid process, lies a vast neural network called the 'Celiac Plexus'. This is a crucial pathway connecting the brain and internal organs, and an important intersection where the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems meet. Chronic stress and anxiety directly stimulate this plexus, causing it to become rigid. When these nerves stiffen, the movement of the diaphragm, located directly above, becomes sluggish, leading to shallow breathing and chest tightness.
Simultaneously, the rigid nerves impede gastrointestinal motility, causing indigestion. Poor digestion, in turn, leads to more stress, creating a vicious cycle where stress further hardens the epigastrium. It's like a blocked waterway causing a pond to stagnate. The reason acid suppressants or digestive aids only offer temporary relief is that medication doesn't address the fundamental cause: the 'rigid nerves'.
|
💡 Your epigastric discomfort might not be 'gastritis', but rather a signal of 'accumulated tension in your body'. If no amount of massaging around your epigastric area brings relief, that hardness might not be just simple muscle tightness. It's a powerful warning message from your body telling you to 'release the tension now'. |
Releasing Both Physical and Mental Tension Is Key
Feeling your epigastrium as hard as a rock isn't merely a digestive system issue. It's clear evidence that the core of your body is directly reacting to mental tension and anxiety. If you want to resolve phlegm accumulation, relying solely on acid suppressants or digestive aids isn't enough; efforts to manage fundamental stress and anxiety are also necessary.
Regular deep breathing, meditation, and light stretching are greatly helpful in releasing tension in the diaphragm and the muscles around the epigastrium, and in restoring the balance of the autonomic nervous system. Your epigastrium is a mirror reflecting your mind. It's time to clean that mirror and relieve the tension in both your body and mind.