Playground Myth Medicine Biology

If You Swallow Gum It Gets Stuck in Your Throat

Gum passes through safely; it doesn't lodge in your throat

Kids feared that swallowing chewing gum would cause it to stick in their throat, choking them or requiring medical intervention.

Gum cannot get stuck in your throat. Your esophagus is lined with mucus that prevents adhesion, and swallowed gum is propelled by normal swallowing and peristalsis. It travels into your stomach and continues through your digestive tract unchanged, exiting your body in stool. While large quantities of gum combined with other blockage risks could theoretically cause problems in young children, a single piece is completely safe.

Believed 1950–2010
Year Revised None
Why Changed Never True
Confidence Fully Debunked
Region Worldwide

Reception

8/10
4/10

Sources

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