BrainStuff Classics: Why Do We Get Hiccups? - podcast episode cover

BrainStuff Classics: Why Do We Get Hiccups?

Dec 11, 20224 min
--:--
--:--
Listen in podcast apps:
Metacast
Spotify
Youtube
RSS

Episode description

What's happening when you get hiccups, and how can you stop them? Learn what science knows -- and doesn't know -- in this classic episode of BrainStuff.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of I Heart Radio. Hey rain Stuff. I'm Lauren Vogelbaum, and today's episode is another classic. In this one, we go into the widely annoying but surprisingly confounding causes and hears of hiccups. Hey brain Stuff, I'm Lauren Vogelbaum, and today's question is how do we get hiccups? Science isn't sure, actually, but it's

not that medical science has been ignoring hiccups. When these spasms are frequent or persistent in adults, they can indicate over a hundred different diseases and disorders, from multiple sclerosis to cancer to appendicitis, and hiccups themselves can get serious and what's called intractable cases. Hiccups don't stop for more than a month and can go on for years without relief, leading to complications like a regular heartbeat, weight loss, insomnia,

and emotional distress. Understandably, but okay, science isn't totally ignorant here. We know the basics. Hiccups are reflexive spasms of the diaphragm and glottis and more on both of those in a second caused by irritation to any of several nerves. Throughout your body. During normal, non hiccuppy breathing, you move air into and out of your lungs, partially thanks to

contractions of your diaphragm. It contracts pulling downward as you inhale, giving your lungs room to expand, then releases, relaxing upward and letting your lungs contract as you exhale, and all that air moves through your throat and importantly through your glottis, which is the opening between your vocal cords. But during a hiccup, at least half of your diaphragm for some reason contracts sharply about eighty percent of the time, it's

just the left half. Go figure that contraction starts pulling in a deep breath, but that breath gets cut short by the glottis snapping shut about three hundreds of a second later. The hicck sound comes from that sudden closure. In most cases, hiccups are caused by irritation of the fhrenic nerves, which control the motion of the diaphragm and send your brain sensory information about what's going on in

various parts of your neck and body. That irritation is usually from your stomach distending when you accidentally swallow air, or when you eat or drink too much too fast,

especially carbonated beverages like soda or beer. In rarer cases, lots of other irritations can be at fault more serious than having over drank soda or beer, such as infections of or trauma to anything that the fhrenic nerves touch, like a tumor pressing against them in your neck, or pericarditis, which is the swelling of the membrane around your heart.

Irritations of the vagus nerve can also be hiccup culprits, possibly due to its connection to the larynx, along with everything from your small intestine to the inside of your ear, and lots of stuff in between. If you're looking to get rid of hiccups, some of the most common home remedies really are worthwhile. They work by either overloading the frenic or vagus nerves or by interrupting your involuntary breathing cycle.

For nerve overload, try biting into a lemon, placing a spoonful of sugar on the back of your tongue, pulling on your tongue, or having a friend tickler scare you on the respiratory and try holding your breath, gulping down a glass of water, or breathing into a paper bag and if nothing works, hiccups generally go away on their own. If they do stick around for more than forty eight hours, see a doctor just in case. The purpose behind this

reflex is still a mystery. Some researchers say that they could be vestigial spasms related to how our amphibian ancestors controlled their gills. Others postulate that they help with breastfeeding. Hiccups can release small amounts of air from the stomach into the esophagus, where it can be exhaled, so hiccups might serve to get air out of baby stomachs, making more space for milk. Today's episode is based on a script that I wrote for a brain stuff video for

how stuff works dot Com. The brain Stuff is production of I Heart Radio in partnership with how stuff Works dot Com, and it's produced by Tyler Clang. Four more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the a heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android
Open in Metacast