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How to Get Rid of Hiccups After Surgery

  • Facts
    • What are the reasons for hiccups?
    • Why do we hiccup?
  • Causes
    • What causes hiccups?
  • Newborn
    • How can hiccups in infants and babies be stopped?
  • Symptoms/Signs
    • What are the signs and symptoms of hiccups?
  • Seeking Care
    • When should I contact my doctor for hiccups?
  • Specialists
    • How do medical professionals diagnose the cause of hiccups? Which types of doctors treat hiccups?
  • How to Get Rid of Hiccups
    • How can I get rid of hiccups?
  • Treatment
    • Is there medical treatment for hiccups?
  • Complications
    • Are there any complications of hiccups?
  • Prevention
    • Is it possible to prevent hiccups?
  • Center
    • How Are Hiccups Caused? Center
  • Comments
    • Patient Comments: Hiccups - Symptoms
    • Patient Comments: Hiccups - Medical Help
    • Patient Comments: Hiccups - Remedies and Treatment
    • Patient Comments: Hiccups - Length of Time

An woman drinks water through a napkin, an old wives tale hiccup remedy.

An woman drinks water through a napkin, an old wives tale hiccup remedy. Source: Getty Images

What are the reasons for hiccups?

  • A hiccup is a sudden, involuntary contraction (spasm) of the diaphragm muscle. When the muscle spasms, the vocal cords snap shut, producing the hiccup sound.
  • Common causes of hiccups include:
    • eating too quickly,
    • eating or drinking too much,
    • diseases that irritate the nerves that control the diaphragm,
    • abdominal surgery,
    • strokes,
    • brain tumors,
    • breathing noxious fumes, and
    • certain medications.
  • Most cases of hiccups can be cured or resolve in a short time, and rarely are they a medical emergency. See your doctor if hiccups last more than three hours, or if they disturb your eating or sleeping habits.
  • Home remedies or ways to get rid of hiccups include:
    • Holding your breath
    • Drinking a glass of water quickly
    • Pulling hard on your tongue
    • Biting on a lemon
    • Gargling with water
    • Breathing smelling salts
  • Rarely, a doctor may prescribe medications such as chlorpromazine (Thorazine), haloperidol (Haldol), and metoclopramide (Reglan) for severe, persistent hiccups.
  • Hiccups can be prevented by avoiding overeating, eating too quickly, or drinking too much to help prevent hiccups.

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Check out these 17 weird body quirks and their causes.

  1. Black hairy tongue
  2. Eye twitching
  3. Brain freeze
  4. Black hairy tongue
  5. Hiccups

An illustration of the diaphragm muscle.

Hiccups (also spelled hiccough) are sudden, involuntary contractions (spasms) of the diaphragm muscle. Source: iStock

Why do we hiccup?

Hiccups (also spelled hiccough) are sudden, involuntary contractions (spasms) of the diaphragm muscle. When the muscle spasms, the vocal cords snap shut, producing the hiccup sound.

Hiccups are often rhythmic. They are usually just a temporary minor annoyance, but prolonged hiccups may signal a major medical problem. The longest recorded hiccup attack is six decades!

Women and men tend to get hiccups equally as often, but hiccups that last more than 48 hours are more common in men. Hiccups can even occur in a fetus while still in utero.

The medical term for hiccups is singultus, which comes from the Latin word for "gasp" or "sob."

A woman eating a lot of food fast.

Some causes of hiccups include eating too quickly and swallowing air along with foods. Source: iStock

What causes hiccups?

Most of the time, there is no obvious cause for hiccups. However, there are some common known causes of hiccups.

Some causes of hiccups include:

  • Eating too quickly and swallowing air along with foods.
  • Eating too much (fatty or spicy foods, in particular) or drinking too much (carbonated beverages or alcohol) can distend the stomach and cause irritation of the diaphragm, which can cause hiccups.
  • Any disease or disorder that irritates the nerves that control the diaphragm (such as liver disease, pneumonia, or other lung disorders).
  • Abdominal surgery can also irritate the nerves that control the diaphragm, causing hiccups.
  • Strokes or brain tumors involving the brain stem, and some chronic medical disorders (such as renal failure) have also been reported to cause hiccups.
  • Noxious fumes can also trigger hiccups.
  • Sudden changes in temperature
  • Fear or excitement

Some medications may also have hiccups as a side effect, for example:

  • Medications for acid reflux
  • Most benzodiazepines, including diazepam (Valium), alprazolam (Xanax), and lorazepam (Ativan)
  • Levodopa, nicotine, and ondansetron (Zofran)

A mom comforts her baby with hiccups.

You may try changing the position of the infant or baby; try to get your baby to burp, or calming him/her down to cure the hiccups. Source: iStock

How can hiccups in infants and babies be stopped?

As in adults, hiccups in newborns, infants, and babies are common and generally of no concern. If hiccups occur during feeding, stop feeding until the hiccups go away. Usually, the hiccups will "go away" in an infant or baby. You may try changing the position of the infant or baby; try to get your baby to burp, or calming him/her down to cure the hiccups. Sometimes resuming feeding will stop the hiccups. If your baby frequently hiccups during feedings, feed your baby when he or she is already relaxed and is not overly hungry yet.

If your child's hiccups worsen or they seem to upset him, contact your pediatrician.

What are the signs and symptoms of hiccups?

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Sudden, forceful movement of the diaphragm, that causes the hiccup sound, is the only symptom of hiccups.

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An infographic about the longest case of the hiccups ever recorded.

There may be many different specialists who treat hiccups depending on the underlying cause. Source: MedicineNet

How do medical professionals diagnose the cause of hiccups? Which types of doctors treat hiccups?

Most of us know what a hiccup feels like and how to recognize it. In a medical setting, the diagnosis of hiccups is based on the physical evaluation. Blood tests or X-rays are usually not necessary unless your hiccups are a symptom of an associated medical condition.

Which specialties of doctors treat hiccups?

Hiccups generally go away on their own and do not require medical treatment, however, if hiccups last more than three hours or disturb eating or sleeping, you may see your primary care providers (PCP) such as a family practitioner, internist, or a child's pediatrician.

There may be many different specialists who treat hiccups depending on the underlying cause, for example:

  • If the cause is a stroke or other neurological disorder, you may see a neurologist, a specialist in the nervous system and brain.
  • If the cause is acid reflux, you may see a gastroenterologist, a specialist in disorders of the digestive system.
  • If the cause is lung disease or pneumonia, you may see a pulmonologist, a specialist in disorders of the respiratory tract.

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A woman drinks from the opposite edge of the glass.

A woman drinks from the opposite edge of the glass can decrease hiccuping. Source: Getty Images

How can I get rid of hiccups?

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Home remedies for hiccups

There are numerous home cures for hiccups. You can try these methods at home to get rid of hiccups:

Methods that cause the body to retain carbon dioxide, which is thought to relax and stop the spasms of the diaphragm, which cause the hiccups:

  • Hold your breath

Techniques that stimulate the nasopharynx and the vagus nerve, which runs from the brain to the stomach, and can decrease hiccuping:

  • Drink a glass of water quickly
  • Have someone frighten you
  • Pull hard on your tongue
  • Bite on a lemon
  • Gargle with water
  • Drink from the far side of a glass
  • Use smelling salts
  • Place one-half teaspoon of dry sugar on the back of your tongue. (This process can be repeated three times at 2-minute intervals. Use corn syrup, not sugar, for young children.)

QUESTION

Bowel regularity means a bowel movement every day. See Answer

A patient discusses hiccups with her doctor.

A health-care professional may prescribe medications for severe, chronic hiccups. Chlorpromazine (Thorazine) is usually the first-line medication prescribed for hiccups. Source: iStock

Is there medical treatment for hiccups?

Most hiccups will stop on their own. Home remedies are generally sufficient to resolve hiccuping.

For persistent hiccups (lasting more than three hours), treatment varies, and you may need to contact your doctor.

  • A "hiccup bout" is an episode of hiccups that lasts up to 48 hours
  • "Persistent hiccups" continue more than 48 hours, up to 1 month
  • "Intractable hiccups" last longer than 1 month

A health-care professional may prescribe medications for severe, chronic hiccups. Chlorpromazine (Thorazine) is usually the first-line medication prescribed for hiccups. Other medications used to treat hiccups include haloperidol (Haldol) and metoclopramide (Reglan).

Some muscle relaxants, sedatives, analgesics, and even stimulants have also been reported to help alleviate hiccup symptoms.

Phrenic nerve surgery (the nerve that controls the diaphragm) is a treatment of last resort. This treatment rarely is performed, and phrenic nerve surgery is used only in individuals with long-term hiccups that do not respond to other treatments.

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A man spins his son in the air playfully.

Avoiding overeating, eating too quickly, or drinking too much can help prevent hiccups Source: iStock

Are there any complications of hiccups?

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Because most cases of hiccups resolve themselves either spontaneously or with self-administered treatment, complications are extremely rare.

In severe and persistent cases, where hiccups disturb eating and sleeping patterns, weight loss, or sleep disturbances may occur.

Rarely, cardiac arrhythmias and gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD and GER) have been noted in severe cases of hiccups.

Is it possible to prevent hiccups?

Hiccups cannot always be prevented. Avoiding overeating, eating too quickly, or drinking too much can help prevent hiccups.

Medically Reviewed on 2/17/2021

References

Wilkes, G., et al. "Hiccups." Medscape. Dec 29, 2017. <http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/775746-overview>.

Wilkes, G., et al. "Hiccups Treatment and Management." Medscape. Dec 29, 2017. <http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/775746-treatment>.

How to Get Rid of Hiccups After Surgery

Source: https://www.medicinenet.com/hiccups/article.htm