"I do! I do!"
"Well, then let me hear one."
They will sit there and concentrate so hard and try their best to hiccup, but they won't be able to. My dad amazed me with this trick, and it's worked pretty good on mine, up until around the age of ten. That's when they're smarter than you, you know.
When the diaphragm muscle seizes, it stretches or squeezes the lungs suddenly, causing mild to sharp pain. Once it has seized, it upsets the normal breathing pattern.
Any muscle will spasm when it is not getting proper perfusion of oxygen. Since a hiccup upsets the breathing pattern, it often falls into a feedback loop, sustaining the conditions that caused them to start.
All the wives' tales to cure hiccups seem to revolve around
Breathing in a paper or plastic bag is not recommended for hyperventilation or hiccups; forcing a lack of oxygen by breathing from a bag can be dangerous to the brain.
To cure hiccups: stretch and perfuse your diaphragm. Breathe deeply and slowly, holding air in long enough to let the lungs convey oxygen into your bloodstream. Repeat.
To cure hyperventilation: Breathe slowly, remain calm. Don't restrict airflow, but don't breathe overly deeply either. Relax.
My mother used to get hiccups quite frequently. They were not the subtle, silent kind--the ones that would go unnoticed save for a telltale twitch of the shoulders or heave of the chest. No, she got LOUD hiccups, the kind that shatter a quiet evening at home with an ear-warping
...or something like that. Onomatopoeia doesn't work here; the English language doesn't contain the phonemes for the sounds she made. She's also easily embarrassed, so she'd blush. So you'd have this purple-faced woman (who is also, I might add, six feet tall) making loud
sounds. Thus, over the years, we've managed to accumulate several excellent hiccup cures. I imagine that these are largely idiosyncratic, but maybe they'll work for you, too. Here they are:
There you go. Don't ask me why it works, but it does. If peanut butter can cure my mom's hiccups, it can certainly cure yours.
The treatments of hiccups are diverse. Nonpharmacologic hiccup treatments usually rely on some method of nasopharyngeal stimulation; examples include forcible traction of the tongue, gargling or sipping iced water, swallowing a tablespoon of granulated sugar, grape jelly under the tongue, and inhalation of noxious fumes (ammonia). Direct pharyngeal stimulation with a rubber catheter is reportedly successful in 90 percent of cases. Pharmacologic treatments include administering continuous positive-pressure ventilation at 25 to 35 cmH2O, chlorpromazine, haloperidol, phenytoin, phenobarbital, carbamazepine, and sodium valproate. Other agents sporadically reported in the literature include metoclopramide, amitriptyline, chloral hydrate and ketamine.
Disclaimer: I am not a scientist. I do not sell pharmaceuticals. There are a lot of things wrong with me. Therefore, my use of medical type terminology is spotty at best.
According to a gentleman with whom I was acquainted some time ago, hiccuping is an involuntary reaction over which we normally have no control. The concept he introduced me to after making this statement came as a complete surprise. We were driving back to New England from the Meadowlands in a car with three other gentlemen when I began hiccuping.
Pete was driving the car we were herded into, and as we travelled up the highway known as I-95, he turned and screamed at me.
"Come on you stupid fucker, give me another hiccup! You stupid ass fairy son of a bitch, give me a good one or I swear I will turn the wheel and drive right off the side of the road and kill us all!"
After my hiccups came to an abrupt halt, Pete went on to discuss the rest of his theory, which he admitted was not entirely his own. He had extracted it from a number of published hiccup cures. By trying to make an involuntary hiccup attack into a voluntary action, the mind and body become so confused that the hiccups stop. Beyond that, he claimed that his "years of research" had taught him that fear and intimidation are important components of the hiccup cure. By sitting in a room by yourself mumbling "please, won't you hiccup for me?" the mind just says "yeah right, like I don't know what you're trying to do." Therefore, pressuring the hiccup victim to produce a hiccup or face severe consequences became part of his procedure.
I have executed the procedure myself, but Pete's performances were always show stoppers. At one party he took a pistol from his bedroom and ran into the living room and held it against the head of a girl who had been hiccuping for ten minutes without pause. He demanded that she hiccup again, just for him, or he would shoot her. She was cured. This example is beyond the realm of human decency, but decorum was not one of Pete's interests. For him, the ends always justified the means. Never, ever, try this particular example yourself. EVER.
Other proven methods of this treatment include the use of verbal abuse and threats. If you know the fears and weaknesses of the victim, use these against them. Use the most profane language imaginable and call them every foul name you can think of.
"Everyone will know what a {insert terminology here} you are if you can't produce another hiccup for me RIGHT NOW!"
So, for those who have long held the belief that fear, intimidation and verbal abuse have no constructive use in polite society... I offer you Pete's Hiccup Cure.
Note: This cure has not yet been approved for use in the public school system, so please protect your children. Thank you.
I personally like the deep breathing technique.
However, there is a medical journal article about one man's particularly persistent hiccups:
From the Journal of Internal Medicine, 1990, February issue, 227(2) pages 145-6.
Odeh, M., Bassan, H., Oliven, A.
Department of Internal Medicine, Bnai Zion Medical Center, Haifa, Israel.
Abstract
"A 60-year-old man with acute pancreatitis developed persistent hiccups after insertion of a nasogastric tube. Removal of the latter did not terminate the hiccups which had also been treated with different drugs, and several maneuvers were attempted, but with no success. Digital rectal massage was then performed resulting in abrupt cessation of the hiccups. Recurrence of the hiccups occurred several hours later, and again, they were terminated immediately with digital rectal massage. No other recurrences were observed. This is the second reported case associating cessation of intractable hiccups with digital rectal massage. We suggest that this maneuver should be considered in cases of intractable hiccups before proceeding with pharmacological agents."
That's digital meaning "with the fingers".
I've never had hiccups bad enough to try digital rectal massage, but at least I know of a way to stop it that worked in a hospital for at least two patients. And now, you do to.
It's real. You can check yourself by searching for "hiccups AND digital rectal massage" on PubMed.
I must not hiccup. Hiccups are the lung-killers. Hiccups are the little deaths that bring total obliteration. I will face my hiccups. I will permit them to pass over me and through me. And when they has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see their path. Where the hiccups have gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain.
Haw haw...
But seriously folks, Saige's method works rather well for me. You should try it. Self-control is a very interesting thing.
Another thing to try is to open your trachea, exhale all the air you can, hit the center of your sternum rather firmly, and (just as you hit the sternum) breathe into your stomach. Then belch/breathe out. Obviously not something for polite company. But anyhow, what does this do?
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