Don’t worry man. You’ve been training us to go out and research ourselves too…take your time and don’t worry about rushing to get things pushed and chasing headlines!
The news is a distraction for sure no need for you to address the situation when a million people are doing the same. Whether real or not the character is not coming back and they will use it for some agenda it is weird only 3 videos though that’s another red flag.
Hi Tudor, regarding the med professional questions. I am a laboratory worker with a focus in blood banking. I have witnessed & even assisted in some traumas, but full disclaimer, the most severe bleed I have seen so far has been where a primary vein, not artery, in someone's thigh had been accidentally stabbed. I also have eliminated most online influences and thus did not watch the video, nor after watching the near-psychosis trance most my coworkers were in the following day, have any interest in engaging with it. So with that context, I would say
1. Yes, it is plausible for blood to "spurt". If you look at a diagram of all the major arteries and veins, you'll see the carotid is the very first to branch off the aorta right after it is pumped out by the atrium. There is a lot of pressure at that point & has to be if the blood is going to manage to make it all the way back around. If it was "nicked" then it makes it even more possible to go a longer distance due to high pressure meeting a smaller diameter of exit. Think of when you have a garden hose running and put your thumb over half of it.
2 & 3. Dying "instantly" is fairly rare. Since it sounds like nothing in his nervous system was hit, he would still have a few moments before he lost consciousness from the blood loss. For any blood loss trauma, there will always be a bit of time before the person is overwhelmed by the hypovolemia, since there's a bit over a gallon of blood spread throughout the body. Like if you had the lights on & the sink running in your kitchen- shutting the power off is gonna have a much faster response vs turning off the main water line
Again I work in the medical field, but definitely do not get routinely exposed first-hand to trauma situations. If there is someone here with ER or Trauma Center or EMT/medic experience I would definitely give a lot more weight to their thoughts.
It’s all good….they caught the bad guy after “33” hours…..
Also apparently people are starting to lose jobs over their social media posts……another step ….conform or you will be punished….
Don’t worry man. You’ve been training us to go out and research ourselves too…take your time and don’t worry about rushing to get things pushed and chasing headlines!
The news is a distraction for sure no need for you to address the situation when a million people are doing the same. Whether real or not the character is not coming back and they will use it for some agenda it is weird only 3 videos though that’s another red flag.
Hi Tudor, regarding the med professional questions. I am a laboratory worker with a focus in blood banking. I have witnessed & even assisted in some traumas, but full disclaimer, the most severe bleed I have seen so far has been where a primary vein, not artery, in someone's thigh had been accidentally stabbed. I also have eliminated most online influences and thus did not watch the video, nor after watching the near-psychosis trance most my coworkers were in the following day, have any interest in engaging with it. So with that context, I would say
1. Yes, it is plausible for blood to "spurt". If you look at a diagram of all the major arteries and veins, you'll see the carotid is the very first to branch off the aorta right after it is pumped out by the atrium. There is a lot of pressure at that point & has to be if the blood is going to manage to make it all the way back around. If it was "nicked" then it makes it even more possible to go a longer distance due to high pressure meeting a smaller diameter of exit. Think of when you have a garden hose running and put your thumb over half of it.
2 & 3. Dying "instantly" is fairly rare. Since it sounds like nothing in his nervous system was hit, he would still have a few moments before he lost consciousness from the blood loss. For any blood loss trauma, there will always be a bit of time before the person is overwhelmed by the hypovolemia, since there's a bit over a gallon of blood spread throughout the body. Like if you had the lights on & the sink running in your kitchen- shutting the power off is gonna have a much faster response vs turning off the main water line
Again I work in the medical field, but definitely do not get routinely exposed first-hand to trauma situations. If there is someone here with ER or Trauma Center or EMT/medic experience I would definitely give a lot more weight to their thoughts.