On Death



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Topic: Science > Philosophy
User: "Sir Frederick"
Date: 12 Oct 2007 12:38:46 AM
Object: On Death
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg19626252.800
Death special: How does it feel to die?
13 October 2007
NewScientist.com news service
Anna Gosline

IS IT distressing to experience consciousness slipping away or something people can accept with equanimity? Are there any surprises
in store as our existence draws to a close? These are questions that have plagued philosophers and scientists for centuries, and
chances are you've pondered them too occasionally.
None of us can know the answers for sure until our own time comes, but the few individuals who have their brush with death
interrupted by a last-minute reprieve can offer some intriguing insights. Advances in medical science, too, have led to a better
understanding of what goes on as the body gives up the ghost.
Death comes in many guises, but one way or another it is usually a lack of oxygen to the brain that delivers the coup de grāce.
Whether as a result of a heart attack, drowning or suffocation, for example, people ultimately die because their neurons are
deprived of oxygen, leading to cessation of electrical activity in the brain - the modern definition of biological death.
If the flow of freshly oxygenated blood to the brain is stopped, through whatever mechanism, people tend to have about 10 seconds
before losing consciousness. They may take many more minutes to die, though, with the exact mode of death affecting the subtleties
of the final experience. If you can take the grisly details, read on for a brief guide to the many and varied ways death can
suddenly strike.
Drowning
The "surface struggle" for breath
Death by drowning has a certain dark romance to it: countless literary heroines have met their end slipping beneath the waves with
billowy layers of petticoats floating around their heads. In reality, suffocating to death in water is neither pretty nor painless,
though it can be surprisingly swift.
Just how fast people drown depends on several factors, including swimming ability and water temperature. In the UK, where the water
is generally cold, 55 per cent of open-water drownings occur within 3 metres of safety. Two-thirds of victims are good swimmers,
suggesting that people can get into difficulties within seconds, says Mike Tipton, a physiologist and expert in marine survival at
the University of Portsmouth in the UK.
Typically, when a victim realises that they cannot keep their head above water they tend to panic, leading to the classic "surface
struggle". They gasp for air at the surface and hold their breath as they bob beneath, says Tipton. Struggling to breathe, they
can't call for help. Their bodies are upright, arms weakly grasping, as if trying to climb a non-existent ladder from the sea.
Studies with New York lifeguards in the 1950s and 1960s found that this stage lasts just 20 to 60 seconds.
When victims eventually submerge, they hold their breath for as long as possible, typically 30 to 90 seconds. After that, they
inhale some water, splutter, cough and inhale more. Water in the lungs blocks gas exchange in delicate tissues, while inhaling water
also triggers the airway to seal shut - a reflex called a laryngospasm. "There is a feeling of tearing and a burning sensation in
the chest as water goes down into the airway. Then that sort of slips into a feeling of calmness and tranquility," says Tipton,
describing reports from survivors.
That calmness represents the beginnings of the loss of consciousness from oxygen deprivation, which eventually results in the heart
stopping and brain death.
Heart attack
One of the most common forms of exit
The "Hollywood Heart Attack", featuring sudden pain, desperate chest-clutching and immediate collapse, certainly happens in a few
cases. But a typical "myocardial infarction", as medical-speak has it, is a lot less dramatic and comes on slowly, beginning with
mild discomfort.
The most common symptom is, of course, chest pain: a tightness, pressure or squeezing, often described as an "elephant on my chest",
which may be lasting or come and go. This is the heart muscle struggling and dying from oxygen deprivation. Pain can radiate to the
jaw, throat, back, belly and arms. Other signs and symptoms include shortness of breath, nausea and cold sweats.
Most victims delay before seeking assistance, waiting an average of 2 to 6 hours. Women are the worst, probably because they are
more likely to experience less well-known symptoms, such as breathlessness, back or jaw pain, or nausea, says JoAnn Manson, an
epidemiologist at Harvard Medical School. Survivors say they just didn't want to make a fuss; that it felt more like indigestion,
tiredness or muscle cramps than a heart attack. Then again, some victims are just in denial.
Delay costs lives. Most people who die from heart attacks do so before reaching hospital. The actual cause of death is often heart
arrhythmia - disruption of the normal heart rhythm, in other words.
Even small heart attacks can play havoc with the electrical impulses that control heart muscle contraction, effectively stopping it.
In about 10 seconds the person loses consciousness, and minutes later they are dead.
Patients who make it to hospital quickly fare much better; in the UK and US more than 85 per cent of heart attack patients admitted
to hospital survive to 30 days. Hospitals can deploy defibrillators to shock the heart back into rhythm, and clot-busting drugs and
artery-clearing surgery.
Bleeding to death
Several stages of haemorrhagic shock
The speed of exsanguination, as bleeding to death is known, depends on the source of the bleed, says John Kortbeek at the University
of Calgary in Alberta, Canada, and chair of Advanced Trauma Life Support for the American College of Surgeons. People can bleed to
death in seconds if the aorta, the major blood vessel leading from the heart, is completely severed, for example, after a severe
fall or car accident.
Death could creep up much more slowly if a smaller vein or artery is nicked - even taking hours. Such victims would experience
several stages of haemorrhagic shock. The average adult has 5 litres of blood. Losses of around 750 millilitres generally cause few
symptoms. Anyone losing 1.5 litres - either through an external wound or internal bleeding - feels weak, thirsty and anxious, and
would be breathing fast. By 2 litres, people experience dizziness, confusion and then eventual unconsciousness.
"Survivors of haemorrhagic shock describe many different experiences, ranging from fear to relative calm," Kortbeek says. "In large
part this would depend on what and how extensive the associated injuries were. A single penetrating wound to the femoral artery in
the leg might be less painful than multiple fractures sustained in a motor vehicle crash."
Fire
It's usually the toxic gases that prove lethal
Long the fate of witches and heretics, burning to death is torture. Hot smoke and flames singe eyebrows and hair and burn the throat
and airways, making it hard to breathe. Burns inflict immediate and intense pain through stimulation of the nociceptors - the pain
nerves in the skin. To make matters worse, burns also trigger a rapid inflammatory response, which boosts sensitivity to pain in the
injured tissues and surrounding areas.
As burn intensities progress, some feeling is lost but not much, says David Herndon, a burns-care specialist at University of Texas
Medical Branch in Galveston. "Third-degree burns do not hurt as much as second-degree wounds, as superficial nerves are destroyed.
But the difference is semantic; large burns are horrifically painful in any instance."
Some victims of severe burns report not feeling their injuries while they are still in danger or intent on saving others. Once the
adrenalin and shock wear off, however, the pain quickly sets in. Pain management remains one of the most challenging medical
problems in the care of burns victims.
Most people who die in fires do not in fact die from burns. The most common cause of death is inhaling toxic gases - carbon
monoxide, carbon dioxide and even hydrogen cyanide - together with the suffocating lack of oxygen. One study of fire deaths in
Norway from 1996 found that almost 75 per cent of the 286 people autopsied had died from carbon monoxide poisoning.
Depending on the size of the fire and how close you are to it, concentrations of carbon monoxide could start to cause headache and
drowsiness in minutes, eventually leading to unconsciousness. According to the US National Fire Protection Association, 40 per cent
of the victims of fatal home fires are knocked out by fumes before they can even wake up.
Decapitation
Nearly instantaneous
Beheading, if somewhat gruesome, can be one of the quickest and least painful ways to die - so long as the executioner is skilled,
his blade sharp, and the condemned sits still.
The height of decapitation technology is, of course, the guillotine. Officially adopted by the French government in 1792, it was
seen as more humane than other methods of execution. When the guillotine was first used in public, onlookers were reportedly aghast
at the speed of death.
Quick it may be, but consciousness is nevertheless believed to continue after the spinal chord is severed. A study in rats in 1991
found that it takes 2.7 seconds for the brain to consume the oxygen from the blood in the head; the equivalent figure for humans has
been calculated at 7 seconds. Some macabre historical reports from post-revolutionary France cited movements of the eyes and mouth
for 15 to 30 seconds after the blade struck, although these may have been post-mortem twitches and reflexes.
If you end up losing your head, but aren't lucky enough to fall under the guillotine, or even a very sharp, well-wielded blade, the
time of conscious awareness of pain may be much longer. It took the axeman three attempts to sever the head of Mary Queen of Scots
in 1587. He had to finish the job with a knife.
Decades earlier in 1541, Margaret Pole, the Countess of Salisbury, was executed at the Tower of London. She was dragged to the
block, but refused to lay her head down. The inexperienced axe man made a gash in her shoulder rather than her neck. According to
some reports, she leapt from the block and was chased by the executioner, who struck 11 times before she died.
Electrocution
The heart and the brain are most vulnerable
In accidental electrocutions, usually involving low, household current, the most common cause of death is arrhythmia, stopping the
heart dead. Unconsciousness ensues after the standard 10 seconds, says Richard Trohman, a cardiologist at Rush University in
Chicago. One study of electrocution deaths in Montreal, Canada found that 92 per cent had probably died from arrhythmia.
Higher currents can produce nearly immediate unconsciousness. The electric chair was designed to produce instant loss of
consciousness and painless death - a step up from traditional hangings - by conducting the current through the brain and the heart.
Whether it achieves this end is debatable. Studies on dogs in 1950 found that electrodes had to be placed on either side of the head
to ensure sufficient current passed through the brain to knock the creature out. There have been many botched executions - those
that required several jolts to kill, or where flames leapt from the prisoner's head, in one case due to a damp synthetic sponge
being attached to the electrodes on the prisoner's head, which was such a poor conductor it was heated up by the current and caught
fire.
An analysis in 2005 of post-mortem remains from 43 prisoners sentenced to death by electrocution found the most common visible
injuries to be head and leg burns where the electrodes were attached. The study's senior author, William Hamilton, a medical
examiner in Florida, concluded that these burns occurred post-mortem and that death was indeed instantaneous.
However, John Wikswo, a biophysicist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, maintains that the thick, insulating bones of
the skull would prevent sufficient current from reaching the brain, and prisoners could instead be dying from heating of the brain,
or perhaps from suffocation due to paralysis of the breathing muscles - either way, an unpleasant way to go.
Fall from a height
If possible aim to land feet first
A high fall is certainly among the speediest ways to die: terminal velocity (no pun intended) is about 200 kilometres per hour,
achieved from a height of about 145 metres or more. A study of deadly falls in Hamburg, Germany, found that 75 per cent of victims
died in the first few seconds or minutes after landing.
The exact cause of death varies, depending on the landing surface and the person's posture. People are especially unlikely to arrive
at the hospital alive if they land on their head - more common for shorter (under 10 metres) and higher (over 25 metres) falls. A
1981 analysis of 100 suicidal jumps from the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco - height: 75 metres, velocity on impact with the
water: 120 kilometres per hour - found numerous causes of instantaneous death including massive lung bruising, collapsed lungs,
exploded hearts or damage to major blood vessels and lungs through broken ribs.
Survivors of great falls often report the sensation of time slowing down. The natural reaction is to struggle to maintain a
feet-first landing, resulting in fractures to the leg bones, lower spinal column and life-threatening broken pelvises. The impact
travelling up through the body can also burst the aorta and heart chambers. Yet this is probably still the safest way to land,
despite the force being concentrated in a small area: the feet and legs form a "crumple zone" which provides some protection to the
major internal organs.
Some experienced climbers or skydivers who have survived a fall report feeling focused, alert and driven to ensure they landed in
the best way possible: relaxed, legs bent and, where possible, ready to roll. Certainly every little helps, but the top tip for
fallers must be to aim for a soft landing. A paper from 1942 reports a woman falling 28 metres from her apartment building into
freshly tilled soil. She walked away with just a fractured rib and broken wrist.
Hanging
Speed of death depends on the hangman's skill
Suicides and old-fashioned "short drop" executions cause death by strangulation; the rope puts pressure on the windpipe and the
arteries to the brain. This can cause unconsciousness in 10 seconds, but it takes longer if the noose is incorrectly sited.
Witnesses of public hangings often reported victims "dancing" in pain at the end of the rope, struggling violently as they
asphyxiated. Death only ensues after many minutes, as shown by the numerous people being resuscitated after being cut down - even
after 15 minutes.
When public executions were outlawed in Britain in 1868, hangmen looked for a less performance-oriented approach. They eventually
adopted the "long-drop" method, using a lengthier rope so the victim reached a speed that broke their necks. It had to be tailored
to the victim's weight, however, as too great a force could rip the head clean off, a professionally embarrassing outcome for the
hangman.
Despite the public boasting of several prominent executioners in late 19th-century Britain, a 1992 analysis of the remains of 34
prisoners found that in only about half of cases was the cause of death wholly or partly due to spinal trauma. Just one-fifth showed
the classic "hangman's fracture" between the second and third cervical vertebrae. The others died in part from asphyxiation.
Michael Spence, an anthropologist at the University of Western Ontario in London, Canada, has found similar results in US victims.
He concluded, however, that even if asphyxiation played a role, the trauma of the drop would have rapidly rendered all of them
unconscious. "What the hangmen were looking for was quick cessation of activity," he says. "And they knew enough about their craft
to ensure that happened. The thing they feared most was decapitation."
Lethal injection
US-government approved, but is it really painless?
Lethal injection was designed in Oklahoma in 1977 as a humane alternative to the electric chair. The state medical examiner and
chair of anaesthesiology settled on a series of three drug injections. First comes the anaesthetic thiopental to speed away any
feelings of pain, followed by a paralytic agent called pancuronium to stop breathing. Finally potassium chloride is injected, which
stops the heart almost instantly.
Each drug is supposed to be administered in a lethal dose, a redundancy to ensure speedy and humane death. However, eyewitnesses
have reported inmates convulsing, heaving and attempting to sit up during the procedure, suggesting the cocktail is not always
completely effective.
The reason, say Leonidas Koniaris at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, is insufficient thiopental. He and his
colleagues analysed 41 executions by lethal injection in North Carolina and California, and compared anaesthetic doses to known
effects in animal models, such as pigs. As the same dose of thiopental is used regardless of body weight, the anaesthesia produced
in some heavier inmates might be inadequate, they concluded.
"I think that awareness is a real possibility in a large fraction of executions," says Koniaris. That awareness might include
feelings of suffocation from paralysed lungs and the searing, burning pain of a potassium chloride injection. The effect of the
paralytic, however, might mean that witnesses never see any outward signs of pain.
The Supreme Court is now going to review whether this mode of execution is legal.
Explosive decompression
It takes your breath away
Death due to exposure to vacuum is a staple of science fiction plots, whether the unfortunate gets thrown from an airlock or
ruptures their spacesuit.
In real life there has been just one fatal space depressurisation accident. This occurred on the Russian Soyuz-11 mission in 1971,
when a seal leaked upon re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere; upon landing all three flight crew were found dead from asphyxiation.
Most of our knowledge of depressurisation comes from animal experiments and the experiences of pilots in accidents at very high
altitudes. When the external air pressure suddenly drops, the air in the lungs expands, tearing the fragile gas exchange tissues.
This is especially damaging if the victim neglects to exhale prior to decompression or tries to hold their breath. Oxygen begins to
escape from the blood and lungs.
Experiments on dogs in the 1950s showed that 30 to 40 seconds after the pressure drops, their bodies began to swell as the water in
tissues vaporised, though the tight seal of their skin prevented them from "bursting". The heart rate rises initially, then
plummets. Bubbles of water vapour form in the blood and travel through the circulatory system, obstructing blood flow. After about a
minute, blood effectively stops circulating.
Human survivors of rapid decompression accidents include pilots whose planes lost pressure, or in one case a NASA technician who
accidentally depressurised his flight suit inside a vacuum chamber. They often report an initial pain, like being hit in the chest,
and may remember feeling air escape from their lungs and the inability to inhale. Time to the loss of consciousness was generally
less than 15 seconds.
One mid-1960s experiment by the US Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory in New Mexico found that a chimpanzee had a period of useful
consciousness of just 11 seconds before lack of oxygen caused them to pass out.
Surprisingly, in view of these apparently traumatic effects, animals that have been repressurised within 90 seconds have generally
survived with no lasting damage.
Death - Delve deeper into the riddle of human mortality in our special report.
Anna Gosline is a science writer in Vancouver, Canada
From issue 2625 of New Scientist magazine, 13 October 2007, page 53-57
.

User: "Awlnoing"

Title: Re: On Death 12 Oct 2007 06:44:03 PM
Missing from the list...
Going feet first through a wood chipper, listening to Al Gore speak, and the
ever popular dynamite vest...
"Sir Frederick" <mmcneill@fuzzysys.com> wrote in message
news:ks1ug354br42fck7mf73i1075cda7p3tpc@4ax.com...

http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg19626252.800
Death special: How does it feel to die?
13 October 2007
NewScientist.com news service
Anna Gosline

....
.


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