So you rejected the person who then thinks “You turned me upside down figuratively, so I’m going to turn you upside down literally.” They kidnap you and suspend you upside down in chains, with a food tube in your stomach and other tubes to carry away your wastes.
What would be the long term effcts. Woiuld you eventually die? How long could you live like that?
There are a billion Chinese on the opposite side of the planet. Even without feeding or waste tubes they seem to be doing okay.
(Sorry there’s not much science behind that, but I thought it was a great question.)
Don’t be silly. The Chinese are sideways. It’s the Australians that are upside down.
Apparently, when David Blaine was doing this stunt, rent-a-quote doctors suggested it could lead to increased blood pressure in the brain and eyes, which could lead to stroke or vision problems due to ruptured capillaries. Breathing would also be more difficult thanks to the weight of intestines on the diaphragm.
Yep, breathing difficulties leading to pneumonia from infected, collapsed alveoli, followed by increased intracranial pressure, are going to be your worst concerns, I think. The pneumonia will probably be what kills you, but there is the chance you’ll get a brain bleed first. If it were I, I’d pray for the brain bleed, the same way I’d pray for flames over smoke if I’m ever burned alive. It’ll hurt a lot (a subarachnoid hemhorrage is often described as “the worst headache of my life”) but it’ll be over quicker.
If this were a child, the physical appearance would change over a prolonged time (years). Gravity has a distinct impact upon how our facial features develop.
Not directly, but as I understand it, the pressure of the blood pooling causes the brain to squish up against the bone of the cranium, and that’s painful. Although why a subarachnoid hemorrhage hurts more than an epidural or intracerebral one, I can’t tell you. But that precise phrase: “worst headache of my life” is the one they teach us to be on the lookout for, specifically, a subarachnoid bleed. The other kinds of bleeds may cause a headache, but not the worst one of your life, apparently. (It also tends to be the last one of your life; prognosis with a subarachnoid bleed is very poor.)
One of the positions used by Romans in crucifixion was to put the person upside down. Apparently this led to earlier death than the head up position…the crucified person often died due to breathing difficulties. Human abdominal organs are better suspended to conform with the upright stance, and tend to push upward on the diaphragm, thus inhibiting breathing. Lots of folks who have breathing difficulties sleep in a semi=upright position because of this.
You don’t need the food tube. You can eat and drink upside down: I once tried it, and it’s not comfortable, but your throat can push the food and drink up to your stomach.
I thought most crucifixions caused death by suffocation. Wasn’t that the point of breaking people’s legs–so they couldn’t support themselves to breathe?
Yup, peristalsis. Which, for the record, chickens don’t have. A chicken kept upside-down (or in zero gravity/freefall) and fed normally will starve to death.
While this has all the feel of a reasonable statement, there’s really no way of knowing how or even if this is true. In the absence of anyone who has developed in the absence of gravity, it’s pretty much just a guess as to the degree and the nature of the truth of this assertion.