Woman who cannot burp finally has first belch thanks to a Botox injection
A woman who had a rare syndrome that left her unable to burp finally had her first belch thanks to a Botox injection.
It came after years of embarrassment of having to pass wind around her hubby to relieve her bloating.
Natalie Bickel, from Indiana, who has a condition called no-burp syndrome, said she suffered such "uncomfortable" bloating as a result that she often couldn't fit in her clothes due to her "stretched out" belly. The only effective way she could release gas was by flatulence, which she admits was not "ideal" and often left her husband Jacob in stitches.
Jacob eventually urged Natalie to seek treatment in February after researching no-burp syndrome online. The unusual condition, known medically as retrograde cricopharyngeal dysfunction (R-CPD), can be treated with a Botox injection into the throat, specifically the cricopharyngeal muscle.
This temporarily paralyses the muscle, allowing it to relax and release pockets of gas. Now able to burp, the 29-year-old is much less bloated and encourages fellow non-burpers to explore similar treatment.
Baby boy has spent his life in hospital as doctors are 'scared' to discharge himHowever she admits that the treatment hasn't completely solved the issue and she still passes wind more than the average person so may need more Botox injections in the future.
Natalie, from Floyds Knobs, Indiana, US, said: "I was extra bloated all the time. I couldn't relieve gas until the digestion process started. I couldn't fit in my clothes. It was just very uncomfortable.
"It stopped me from hanging out with people and going to events as I felt so bloated and I didn't know what to wear. I would feel so uncomfortable and just end up not going."
Natalie said she often experienced abdominal cramping as the gas built up and her belly 'stretched out'.
After being encouraged to get it checked by Jacob, the PR specialist spent two years visiting doctors, getting tests and eliminating foods in an attempt to ease her discomfort, but nothing worked. Natalie said her gastroenterologist had not heard of the condition but referred her to an ears, nose and throat specialist who offered the treatment.
In May this year, she was given the Botox injection at Norton Brownsboro Hospital, Kentucky. She received a general anesthetic before the 10-minute-long procedure and paid close to $1,000, after insurance deductions.
Immediately after the treatment, Natalie had a sore throat and was unable to swallow properly. Despite these 'weird' side effects, she was able to burp within two weeks.
Natalie said: "I've seen improvement, but it's not been life changing. "I'm able to burp but they are completely unexpected. I can't make myself burp like other people – as in I can't force the air out when it feels like it needs to come out.
"It's funny because I gasp every time I have a burp because they're so random. My bloating has gone down as well."
Despite having 'less flatulence' now, she claims to still fart more than the average person.
Disabled woman paralysed after falling from wheelchair on plane walkway diesShe said: "My husband finds my flatulence funny, but it's definitely not ideal. I don't want to be doing that all the time around him. But he's not grossed out by it."
Natalie plans to return for a second round of Botox treatment after her check up next month – to hopefully help her learn to burp on demand.