Hiccups

Spturley
on 10/17/16 3:33 pm
VSG on 10/12/16

I had my vsg preforms on Wednesday Oct 12th, healing great but I am fighting hiccups! I used to never get hiccups but I am assuming having my innards jostled around is what os causing the problem. Nothing can prepare me for the hiccups, does anyone have any reccommendations? 

 

P

"So...all of time and space, everything that ever happened or ever will - where do you want to start?"

 

VSG: 10/12/16

Kathy8429
on 10/17/16 3:55 pm

Slow down drinking and try room temperature drinks 

jujuh
on 10/17/16 4:30 pm - Northern Cincinnati Suburb, OH
VSG on 06/03/16

My husband and I both got the hiccups when we were full and if we drank too fast. Slow down and sip and measure your food so you are putting the correct amount in. I still occasionally get the hiccups.

Grim_Traveller
on 10/17/16 5:20 pm
RNY on 08/21/12

Hiccups and runny nose are signs that you are full.

6'3" tall, male.

Highest weight was 475. RNY on 08/21/12. Current weight: 198.

M1 -24; M2 -21; M3 -19; M4 -21; M5 -13; M6 -21; M7 -10; M8 -16; M9 -10; M10 -8; M11 -6; M12 -5.

Neesie57
on 10/17/16 5:43 pm
VSG on 08/04/15

Hiccups are a sign of fullness for me, and may be for you as well.

5' 5" tall. VSG on August 4, 2015/ Starting weight 239.9/ Surgery weight 210.9/ Current weight 137.4/ Goal weight 140/ No longer overweight, now a NORMAL weight. Now that I'm at goal, it's time to move on to maintenance!!!!!!!!

 

 

 

White Dove
on 10/17/16 8:50 pm - Warren, OH

During weight loss surgery, my surgeon cut my vagus nerve.  He told me that cutting the nerve would eliminate hunger.  I have no hunger, but do have hiccups and/or runny nose if I eat too much.  Sometimes I start sneezing.  All symptoms have to do with the vagus nerve either having been severed during surgery or being compresed from too much food.

Real life begins where your comfort zone ends

Anita
on 10/17/16 9:33 pm

I also get hiccups if I've eaten too fast or too much. For me, having a warm drink seems to help.

That one extra bite is the thing that can push me over the edge......or if I'm not paying attention to eating and end up gulping something.

Good friends are like stars. 
You don't always see them but you always know they're there. 
 

 

 

psychoticparrot
on 10/18/16 11:07 am

I hiccupped like crazy for weeks post-op. Your still-swollen stomach is probably irritating your diaphragm, initiating the hiccups. If they become too bothersome, call your surgeon.

Even now, more than a year and a half later, I hiccup when I eat even a mouthful too much. I welcome the hiccups because they're a warning system telling me to slow down and eat less the rest of the day.

 

psychoticparrot

  "Live for what today has to offer, not for what yesterday has taken away."

Lauraloutoo
on 10/27/16 2:26 pm, edited 10/27/16 7:26 am
VSG on 10/24/16

Did they eventually go away for you?  I had my surgery Monday and I've had relentless hiccups ever since, starting just a few hours after surgery. They've been awful on my sore tummy. I know it's not from being full since they started before I was even cleared to drink water. 

Spturley
on 11/8/16 8:43 am
VSG on 10/12/16

They did! i just yook my time and stuck to room temp liquids. I will get one here and there but like most people said it is a sign of fullness! 

 

Best of luck! 

"So...all of time and space, everything that ever happened or ever will - where do you want to start?"

 

VSG: 10/12/16

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