Varminterror
New member
I suppose a fun thought: car accidents can cause instant death, even for folks that don't have any tissue trauma. In general, this is perceived by the medical community to be caused by the massive sudden compression of the body as it slams to a stop. Considering our bodies as a system not so dissimilar to a water balloon, the momentum of our blood and tissue crushes itself, and the weak points rupture, and the nerves get overloaded. The CNS impact causes the instant death, but also the hydro-dynamic pressure spike of the tissue and blood's momentum causes the heart to stop, vessels in the brain to rupture - and everywhere else in the body, lungs to bruise/bleed, etc etc.
This isn't so different than when folks use too short of bungies and the blood slams into their head as they jump and knocks them out.
As a kickboxer, I've also witnessed guys get hit so hard in the liver that it knocked them out instantly, which is not so different, as the liver is a highly vascular area also with a high nerve density.
So whether it's a CNS overload, or a hydrodynamic, or rather hemodynamic effect, instant death CAN happen with bullets, but cannot happen with arrows.
That said, a bullet has to be moving quickly to deliver it. A slow traveling bullet that doesn't expand much won't generate a great enough pressure wave to cause instant shutdown of either CNS or cardiovascular systems. BUT, a penetrating bullet will usually cause more tissue damage than an arrow anyway, so if it misses the pressure wave cut off, it still has the opportunity to kill via hemorrhage.
Or we can talk about ruptured diaphragms, drowning in blood, severed spines, etc etc that will all kill quickly as well, but are different than either of the above discussed.
This isn't so different than when folks use too short of bungies and the blood slams into their head as they jump and knocks them out.
As a kickboxer, I've also witnessed guys get hit so hard in the liver that it knocked them out instantly, which is not so different, as the liver is a highly vascular area also with a high nerve density.
So whether it's a CNS overload, or a hydrodynamic, or rather hemodynamic effect, instant death CAN happen with bullets, but cannot happen with arrows.
That said, a bullet has to be moving quickly to deliver it. A slow traveling bullet that doesn't expand much won't generate a great enough pressure wave to cause instant shutdown of either CNS or cardiovascular systems. BUT, a penetrating bullet will usually cause more tissue damage than an arrow anyway, so if it misses the pressure wave cut off, it still has the opportunity to kill via hemorrhage.
Or we can talk about ruptured diaphragms, drowning in blood, severed spines, etc etc that will all kill quickly as well, but are different than either of the above discussed.