Sunday, May 12

Helicobacter pylori: 7 Things You Need to Know About It

helicobacter pylori
Photo by Kmpzzz from shutterstock.com

Another symptom that might occur when someone is infected with this bacteria, although it’s less frequent, is hiccups. Some people find it funny and weird at the same time, and they can’t understand how some innocent hiccups can actually say a lot about your health.

The helicobacter pylori might lead to severe and persistent hiccups due to the increased acid production, which can cause irritation of esophageal vagal afferents. As you already know, hiccups usually appear after you eat a large meal, drink carbonated beverages or too much alcohol, swallowed air with chewing gum, suck on candies, have emotional stress or excitement, and even due to rapid temperature changes.

Even though they’re typically self-limiting and harmless, they can get pretty serious when they become persistent and unmanageable. If you have a daily hiccup crisis, such as having hiccups every day for a couple of minutes, you should check in with your health care provider.

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