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Carrie Pratt | The Associated Press Jennifer Mee, 15, right, and her mother, Rachel Robidoux, call and text-message friends and family to tell them the good news Thursday that the rapid hiccups tormenting the teen from St. Petersburg, Fla., finally stopped — on their own.
Carrie Pratt | The Associated Press Jennifer Mee, 15, right, and her mother, Rachel Robidoux, call and text-message friends and family to tell them the good news Thursday that the rapid hiccups tormenting the teen from St. Petersburg, Fla., finally stopped — on their own.
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St. Petersburg, Fla. – She sipped pickle juice, held her breath, breathed into a bag, even went to a neurologist, but for more than five weeks nothing would stop a 15-year-old girl’s rapid hiccups – until they finally just stopped on their own.

After trying countless remedies and attracting national media attention, Jennifer Mee said her hiccups suddenly stopped about 5 p.m. Wednesday. No one is certain why.

“Right now, my nose is burning and my throat hurts,” she told reporters, but she said she felt a lot better than she has in weeks.

Jennifer started hiccuping Jan. 23 close to 50 times a minute and stopped only when she was sleeping.

She saw an infectious-disease specialist, a neurologist, a chiropractor, a hypnotist and an acupuncturist. She tried a patented device that is designed to stop hiccups, plus all the old remedies. Her mother called the media two weeks ago to try to find more help for her daughter, who ended up on NBC’s “Today” show.

According to the National Institutes of Health, hiccups can be triggered by anything from spicy foods to stress, and they can start for no reason at all. They’re caused by involuntary contractions of the diaphragm, which cause the vocal cords to close briefly, making that distinctive sound.

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