Hiccups was found in 5-Minute Clinical Consult which helps you diagnose, treat, and follow up on over 900 medical conditions seen in everyday practice.

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Basics

Description

  • Hiccups are caused by a sudden involuntary contraction of the inspiratory muscles (predominantly the diaphragm) terminated by abrupt closure of the glottis, stopping the inflow of air and producing the characteristic sound (1).
  • System(s) affected: Nervous; Pulmonary
  • Synonym(s): Hiccoughs; Singultus

Geriatric Considerations
Can be a serious problem among the elderly

Pregnancy Considerations
  • Fetal hiccups are noted as rhythmic fetal movements (confirmed sonographically) that can be confused with contractions.
  • Fetal hiccups often recur in subsequent pregnancies.

Epidemiology

  • Predominant age: All ages (including fetus)
  • Predominant sex: Male > Female (4:1)

Prevalence
Self-limited hiccups are extremely common, as are intra- and postoperative hiccups; intractable hiccups are rare.

Risk Factors

  • General anesthesia; conscious sedation
  • Postoperative state
  • Genitourinary disorders
  • Irritation of the vagus nerve branches
  • Structural, vascular, infectious, neoplastic, or traumatic CNS lesions

General Prevention

  • Identify and correct the underlying cause.
  • Avoid gastric distention.
  • Seek medical attention for frequent bouts or persistent hiccups.
  • Acupuncture appears to be as or more efficacious than chronic drug therapy to control hiccups.

Etiology

  • Pathophysiologic significance is unknown; may be a vestigial reflex; hiccups have been associated with >100 underlying disorders (1). The latest theory suggests hiccups function to remove swallowed gas from the stomach as a burping reflex (2)
  • Results from stimulation of ≥1 limbs of the hiccup reflux arc (vagus and phrenic nerves) with a “hiccup center” located in the upper spinal cord
  • In men, >90% have an organic basis, whereas in women a psychogenic cause may be more likely.
  • Specific underlying causes include:
    • Alcoholism
    • CNS lesions (brain-stem tumors, vascular lesions, Parkinson disease) (3)
    • Diaphragmatic irritation (tumors, pericarditis, eventration, splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, peritonitis)
    • Hair, insect, or foreign body irritating tympanic membrane
    • Pharyngitis, laryngitis
    • Mediastinal and other thoracic lesions (pneumonia, aortic aneurysm, tuberculosis [TB], myocardial infarction [MI], lung cancer, rib exostoses)
    • Esophageal lesions (reflux esophagitis, achalasia, Candida esophagitis, carcinoma, obstruction)
    • Gastric lesions (ulcer, distention, cancer)
    • Hepatic lesions (hepatitis, hepatoma)
    • Pancreatic lesions (pancreatitis, pseudocysts, cancer)
    • Inflammatory bowel disease
    • Cholelithiasis, cholecystitis
    • Prostatic disorders
    • Appendicitis
    • Postoperative, abdominal procedures (4)
    • Toxic metabolic causes (uremia, hyponatremia, gout, diabetes)
    • Drug-induced (dexamethasone, methylprednisolone, anabolic steroids, benzodiazepines, α-methyldopa, propofol)
    • Psychogenic causes (hysterical neurosis, grief, malingering)
    • Idiopathic

Commonly Associated Conditions

See “Etiology.”

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