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What’s Up with Hiccups?

30 Jan 2019
Guest Author
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air, alcohol, anesthesia, anxiety, bain, breathe into paper bag cold compress, carbonated beverages, casue, chewing gum, Cure, diaphragm, endoscopy, glotti, hiccups, hold breath, hperventilation, intractable hiccups, large meal, larynx, overexcitement, Penn State Health, phrenic nerve, reflexive spasm, smoking, spicy foods, Stacey Milunic, stomach, vagus nerve, vocal chords

Causes, Cures of Hiccups Remain Elusive

Everyone gets hiccups. And nearly everyone has a theory about the cause and the cure.

Woman with hiccups covering her mouth with her hand. (Photo: Getty Images)

No one knows what causes hiccups, but they are rarely an indication of a more serious medical condition. (Photo: Getty Images)

“We don’t know for sure what causes them,” said Dr. Stacey Milunic, a family medicine physician at Penn State Health. “It’s not well understood.”

What medical professionals do know is that hiccups are a reflexive spasm of the diaphragm. The vagus nerve, which connects the brain to the stomach and the glottis (the part of the larynx where vocal chords are located), and the phrenic nerve, which controls the diaphragm, work together to produce a hiccup.

The diaphragm contracts, causing a rapid inhalation of air at the same time that the glottis quickly closes to prevent hyperventilation. The result is that involuntary movement and silly-sounding noise we know as a hiccup.

The affliction, while irritating and occasionally embarrassing, is rarely an indicator of a more serious, underlying medical condition.

Many people notice their hiccups are triggered by emotional states such as anxiety or overexcitement. Others find that eating a large meal or drinking carbonated beverages can bring them on. Sometimes, they can be a side effect of medication or occur after a medical procedure such as an endoscopy or after receiving anesthesia. Some people say that alcohol, smoking, chewing gum and eating spicy foods cause them — but it is hard to say for sure.

“Basically anything that distends or expands the stomach or potentially could irritate it can bring them on,” Milunic said.

She said hiccups are fairly common and can happen to anyone from newborns to the elderly. Babies in utero are frequently seen hiccupping on ultrasounds.

A woman pinching her nose while holding her breath. (Photo: Masterfile)

There is no known cure for hiccups, but a common one is holding your breath. (Photo: Masterfile)

Most people are able to use one of a variety of methods to stop their hiccups. Some hold their breath or breathe into a paper bag. Others ask someone to scare them or put cold compresses on their face, Milunic said. And then there is her personal favorite: drinking water from the opposite side of the glass.

Because hiccups are mostly an annoyance, researchers have not spent a lot of time studying them. Most cases disappear within 48 hours, but Milunic said there are rare cases of intractable hiccups, which are more commonly seen in men than women.

“If you are hiccupping for more than two days, you would want to call your doctor,” she said. “Rarely, but on occasion, it could be a sign of damage to the nerve or another serious medical condition.”

Written by Scott Gilbert of Penn State Health
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