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Old 09-12-2009, 09:39 PM #1
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Well, they're gone. Don't know exactly when they stopped but I just realized I haven't hiccuped in over five minutes so hopefully they've left.

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Old 09-12-2009, 11:25 PM #2
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I'm pleased you're feeling better Kitty. If the hiccups do return, breathing in and out of a paper bag will usually get rid of them.....
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Old 09-12-2009, 11:47 PM #3
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I hadn't thought of hiccups as being MS related.

I hadn't had them in years, but got them not long ago for at least 20 minutes. So annoying.

Some guy from Utah was on Johnny Carson because he couldn't quit hiccupping. Did it all day and night. Bleh.
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Old 09-13-2009, 07:06 AM #4
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I get them constantly. In the hospital setting we would help patients get rid of them by

Taking in a deep breath, blowing it out, then taking 13 small sips of water from a glass. it will feel like you are running out of air, and by the time you hit 13 youre ready to gasp for some air. This resets the Carbon dioxide level in your body, and forces the diaphram to relax. Why 13? its just an easy number. If you can only make 12 or 11 then go for it. I have yet to see this one fail.

Hiccups are miserable creatures. Esp when you hiccup, burp, swallow. yick!
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Old 09-13-2009, 07:56 AM #5
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Default Just another MS Symptom Ha Ha Ha!!!

Looks like hiccups can be a sympton of MS.

jackD aka (Braindead)


Neurology. 2006 Nov 14;67(9):1684-6.


Pathologic laughing and intractable hiccups can occur early in multiple sclerosis.

de Seze J, Zephir H, Hautecoeur P, Mackowiak A, Cabaret M, Vermersch P.

Department of Neurology, CHU of Lille, France.

Pathologic laughing occurs in approximately 10% of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), especially when patients have entered the chronic stage. We describe four patients with MS who, at an early stage, developed pathologic laughing associated, in two cases, with intractable hiccups. In two patients, MRI showed an enhanced lesion in the medulla oblongata and the mesencephalon, two regions suspected of being involved in pathologic laughing and intractable hiccups.

Publication Types:
Case Reports

PMID: 17101907 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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Neurology. 1979 Jun;29(6):797-801.


Hoquet diabolique: intractable hiccups as a manifestation of multiple sclerosis.

McFarling DA, Susac JO.

In three patients, intractable hiccups occurred as part of the symptomatology of multiple sclerosis. In one patient intractable hiccups were the presenting complaint, and in another patient exacerbations of symptoms were almost always heralded by intractable hiccups. Intractable hiccups occur in a variety of diseases, including many that affect the brainstem and cervical cord, but have not been reported in multiple sclerosis. The hiccup may be a "primitive" gastrointestinal reflex that is disinhibited by lesions such as multiple sclerosis plaques. Carbamazepine was successful in arresting the hiccups in one of the cases presented.

Publication Types:
Case Reports

PMID: 221856 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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Last edited by jackD; 09-13-2009 at 11:39 AM.
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Old 09-13-2009, 10:26 PM #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kitty View Post
Well, they're gone. Don't know exactly when they stopped but I just realized I haven't hiccuped in over five minutes so hopefully they've left.

Thank goodness they're gone!!! They're the worst.... I HATE having hiccups.
Put 'em out of your mind and let's hope they don't come back to bug you.
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Old 09-14-2009, 04:33 PM #7
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Two days!! OMG, Kelly, thank goodness they're gone! Sometimes it seems like MS can cause just about anything.
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