Would hanging upside down be fatal?

In movies occasionally I’ll see people being hung upside down, the implication being that this is worse than the regular way. Assuming the person is fed and given water, would death eventually result as a result of being pointed downwards? Why?

I’d imagine drinking would be difficult.

Drinking wouldn’t be that difficult, though it’s not as easy as being upright. The hanging upside down thing disorients the person and makes it much harder to escape (provided you have their hands tied also). Though I’m assuming when you say “the regular way” you mean by the hands and not the neck.

I’d guess that with all the blood rushing to your head you would black out after a while. Even with someone providing food and drink I don’t think you’d last long in this position because of improper blood flow.

Well, I’ve never heard a movie judge read out a sentence of “to be hung by the ankles until dead.”, so I’d guess it’s meant to be more of a form of torture rather than execution. Probably produces a bit of a headache after a while.

I remember seeing a news photo of folks on a roller-coaster that was stuck for several hours upside-down at the top of a vertical loop a couple of years ago… caption said they later required hospital treatment. They didn’t look like they were enjoying the “ride”.

Now now. This is GQ; Let’s try to answer factually. I don’t know if you’re old enough to remember, but a big fad in th 80’s was “gravity inversion boots”. I don’t think people were passing out and dying for hanging upside down too long.

I don’t think you’d die, but wouldn’t you be awfully uncomfortable?
At the very least, I think it would make you dizzy and nauseaous?

A google search on “upside down” health effects turns up folks, such as the Sun & Moon Yoga Studio, who think getting inverted is good for you. I don’t know about that, though.

And yeah, where’d all the gravity boots go?

I saw a cheesy Robert Culp horror flick on cable a couple of months ago that featured a half-naked woman spreadeagled at wrists and ankled and hanging upside down while laughing manically. I offer this merely as proof that such movie scenes exist. She didn’t seem to be there as torture but more to provide atmosphere for a demonic ritual.

Well, by “last long” I meant for weeks at a time. Surely people didn’t stay in their gravity inversion boots that long did they?

OK, one type of torture involving hanging the victim upside-down is intensified by beating the soles of the victim’s feet.

St. Peter was crucified upside-down, at his own request, so, apparently, if the person is suspended just right, they can drown in their own fluids, just as when crucified upright. I guess their lungs would fill from the top “down”, instead of from the bottom up.

Would you mind expounding on this? I’ve never heard this before.

Julie

I read somewhere (i.e. no cite) that some people (specifically, homosexuals) during the middle ages were punished and executed by being sawed in half (groin to neck) while being hung upside down. They were hung upside down specifically so that the blood would rush to the head and they would retain consciousness for a longer period of time during said sawing.

Well…

While searching for a cite, I discovered that the cause of death from crucifixion I had heard of ( that of the lungs filling with fluid (pulmonary edema ) is only one possibility out of several…

… and it seems that there may be several separate and/or combined fatal effects of being hung up by one’s arms on a cross… whether perpendicular (T) or diagonal (X)…

… of course, this has little or nothing to do with the OP question… which also had no mention of being sawed in half while upside-down, either.

Boy, I don’t know about fatal, but when I’ve been upside down my head hurts and I get broken capillaries all around my eyes. But that’s peculiar to me (may not be rare, but not everyone has this outcome)