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  2. Hiccups are common and usually harmless. But they can ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/hiccups-common-usually-harmless...

    Hot or spicy foods, for instance, can stimulate the nerves that control the diaphragm. Eating or drinking too quickly can irritate the diaphragm - as can drinking carbonated beverages, overeating ...

  3. Food poisoning is extremely common. But that doesn't ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/food-poisoning-extremely-common...

    Common symptoms of food poisoning include stomach aches and pain, nausea, fever, vomiting, diarrhea and headache. "Those most at risk for severe foodborne illness include children under 5 ...

  4. Median arcuate ligament syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Median_arcuate_ligament...

    The median arcuate ligament is a fibrous arch formed by the left and right diaphragmatic crura, visible here on the underside of the diaphragm. Specialty: Gastroenterology, Vascular Surgery: Symptoms: Epigastric pain, anorexia, Weight loss: Complications: Gastroparesis Aneurysm of the superior and inferior pancreaticoduodenal arteries: Usual onset

  5. Hiccup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiccup

    There are many folk remedies for hiccups, including headstanding, drinking a glass of water upside-down, being frightened by someone, breathing into a bag, eating a large spoonful of peanut butter and placing sugar on or under the tongue. [27] [28] Acupressure, either through actual function or placebo effect, may cure hiccups in some people ...

  6. Aerophagia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerophagia

    Aerophagia (or aerophagy) is a condition of excessive air swallowing, which goes to the stomach instead of the lungs.Aerophagia may also refer to an unusual condition where the primary symptom is excessive flatus (farting), belching (burping) is not present, and the actual mechanism by which air enters the gut is obscure or unknown. [1]

  7. What Happens to Your Body When You Have Acid Reflux - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/happens-body-acid-reflux...

    While over-the-counter medications such as antacids may relieve mild acid reflux, eating slowly, having smaller meals, limiting trigger foods, wearing loose clothing, avoiding lying down right ...

  8. Dysphagia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysphagia

    Some patients have limited awareness of their dysphagia, so lack of the symptom does not exclude an underlying disease. [11] When dysphagia goes undiagnosed or untreated, patients are at a high risk of pulmonary aspiration and subsequent aspiration pneumonia secondary to food or liquids going the wrong way into the lungs.

  9. Kehr's sign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kehr's_sign

    Kehr's sign is a classic example of referred pain: irritation of the diaphragm is signaled by the phrenic nerve as pain in the area above the collarbone. This is because the supraclavicular nerves have the same cervical nerves origin as the phrenic nerve, C3, C4, and C5.