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Posted by Zero (Member # 3619) on :
 
In the movies it is common to see people banged on the head who fall into unconsciousness, (or being pinched in some nerve), but wake up without any permanent or even temporary damage. What I need is a believable, realistic, actual way of knocking a person out in one blow without causing them any irrepairable harm or amnesia.
 
Posted by pantros (Member # 3237) on :
 
A hit to the back of the head can do exactly that.

In my younger days, when I wasn't always as nice as I am now, I've been on both ends of this.


 


Posted by Zero (Member # 3619) on :
 
Is there a precise place? Can anyone explain to me medically (albeit vaguely) why this could happen?
 
Posted by Leigh (Member # 2901) on :
 
Never did biology, so I never learned the right names but here it goes:

Run your hand up your neck feeling your vertebrate, then you should be able to feel the base of your skull. That's the place where I got hit when I was 13, I woke up with a concussion, mild one at that after I was knocked out.

So I believe that's where your place is.

EDIT: Spelt a simple word wrong.

[This message has been edited by Leigh (edited August 17, 2006).]
 


Posted by pantros (Member # 3237) on :
 
Anywhere near where the neck meets the skull seemed to work. Top of the head, not so much. Right behind the ear seems to do the job.

 
Posted by wetwilly (Member # 1818) on :
 
The forehead can also do it, but it will probably leave a pretty nasty bruise. I know from painful experience. The temple can do it, too, also from painful experience. Back of the head, I don't have any experience with that.
 
Posted by wbriggs (Member # 2267) on :
 
Professional on a closed course. Do not attempt.
 
Posted by Dead_Poet (Member # 3542) on :
 
Be careful with the temple shots though, that could kill someone.
 
Posted by Zero (Member # 3619) on :
 
Seems to me like the point at the top of the neck and the base of the skull is really more of a neck location than a head location. I had written that "he hit him in the back of the neck with the hilt of the dagger and knocked him out cold" or something to that effect and my reader raised the question. That's why I posted it here. Does it reader more oddly to say the neck instead of the ehad, even though the nerve you're talking about seems, to me, to be more in the neck than the head?
 
Posted by Robert Nowall (Member # 2764) on :
 
I read somewhere of a study that suggested those who've had head injuries or concussions are significantly more likely to develop Alzheimer's Syndrome. So the damage inflicted might not be apparent for decades.
 
Posted by thexmedic (Member # 2844) on :
 
In high school I was knocked out twice, by accident, by the same kid. Seriously.

Once was for about 10 seconds in a game of field hockey. The guy took a golf swing and connected just above my right elbow. I was in significant pain when I came round and I still have a tiny dent above that eye.

The second time, he decided to kill a tiny fly with his cricket bat. A fly, as you may have guessed, does not have much stopping power. He swung through and connected with my chin. Next thing I knew I was on the ground. I found out five years later that I'd been out for about 30 seconds and they'd all been pooping themselves. Hardly any pain and no real side effects.

Have no idea why that's the case, but maybe it helps in an anecdotal way

(If it makes anyone feel better, I scarred the kid for life by accidentally putting the corner of a lazerquest gun through his upper lip.)
 


Posted by SimonMRhees (Member # 2777) on :
 
It's from some website aimed at parents, so it's a little schmatzly, but it's pertinent.

http://kidshealth.org/kid/ill_injure/aches/concussion.html

This one's a little more specific.

http://www.ahs.uwaterloo.ca/~cahr/headfall.html

And maybe one more, just for fun:

http://www.brianmac.demon.co.uk/articles/scni18a2.htm

I don't know that it's really possible to knock someone out without causing a little bit of brain damage. I mean, that's how they get knocked out. I guess you're really asking WHERE to hit someone, and I don't know the answer to that question. Like stated above, the temple can be deadly. The object of impact will also affect it. Say, a fist to the head, versus a hammer. A punch will just jostle the jiggly bits, while a hammer, well, it'll jostle and crunch. Not so sure about a dagger handle, but I would imagine it could produce either effect, depending on how hard it was swung.
 


Posted by TMan1969 (Member # 3552) on :
 
When I lived in Woodstock (not the famous one), I had a friend who never played baseball. To help him we made him the pitcher (slo-pitch) and every time he pitched, he would look away - and bend over. So, after pitrching he turned away and once he heard the sound of the bat hitting the ball - he stood up. The ball smacked him on the back his head and down he went..as far as know there was no significant damage - even when he knocked himself out running into a large metallic historical sign.

I played football and one of our running backs thought he would emulate one of his fav's. He deflated some air out his helmet and subsequently got into a head to head tackle. The result was a 2nd degree concussion, loss of memory and regression to child like state. He could not see anything out of right eye for about a day...

 


Posted by rcorporon (Member # 2879) on :
 
In "Red Dragon" a lady gets knocked out when hit with a blackjack (Harris uses the verb "tapped") behind her ear. The police later claim that she just needed a few stitches to fix a minor cut.

She drops to the floor, and I was convinced as a reader that it was plausible.

[This message has been edited by rcorporon (edited August 18, 2006).]
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
There is no way to do this "reliably" with a single blow. Every human has a different tolerance for applied force to the neck and skull, and the threshhold for knocking one person out might be higher than the threshhold of permanent or fatal injury for another person.

Do not attempt to knock someone unconscious with a single blow unless you are willing to risk having that person remain conscious and pissed or risk killing said person.

If you must knock someone unconscious but do not want to take a significant risk of killing, then you should use a cloth soaked in ether or something. This still takes skill, but it is possible to monitor the vitals and consciousness of your target, so it can be reliable in the right hands. A blow, no matter how it is delivered, cannot accomplish this.
 


Posted by sasunnach9 (Member # 3146) on :
 
Based on what I know about anatomy, here's what I've got:

Hitting too hard on the back of the head may cause blindness; the vision center of the brain is in back, in the occipital area. That indentation you can feel as you run your fingers up your neck, to the base of the skull, is where your spinal cord enters the brain (obviously), so being struck there too hard can paralyze or kill.

Striking someone "behind the ear" can kill as well; it's the mastoid process, and is very sensitive. Press on yours a bit, and you can feel it.

The skull under one's forehead is the strongest part of the whole structure, which makes sense really, being the part of the skull that may slam into things accidentally (like when swinging through trees?) Maybe that's why a good portion of "higher" thinking resides in the frontal lobes underneath, I don't know.

Now that I think about it, I don't think I'd want to be struck into unconsciousness via any portion of my brain. I often wonder how in some TV shows, when one of the main characters gets knocked out on a regular basis, he or she doesn't develop permanent brain damage.

"Better to have a bottle in front of me, than a frontal lobotomy." -- WC Fields
 


Posted by Robert Nowall (Member # 2764) on :
 
What Survivor said. A blow to the head might not knock someone out. It might kill them. Or it might stun them a moment before they turn to kill you.

I suppose that's what made the "set your phasers on stun" from Star Trek so useful a plot device. They'd be reliable. (I suppose the Vulcan Neck Pinch would be, too.)
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
If you want to do the Vulcan neck pinch, then go for the nerve centers near the collar with your thumb and index finger while applying pressure to both of the carotid arteries and applying firm but gentle pressure to the wind-pipe to paralyze the vocal cords. Unconsciousness should occur within three to five seconds.

It helps if you're as strong and dextrous as a Vulcan, at least compared to your target. You should practice on someone you're not afraid of killing or badly injuring, because it's easy to screw up and crush the wind-pipe, break the collarbone, or cause brain damage. I'd just go with a head-butt myself, but I can't see many situations where I'd want to knock someone out without taking any risk of killing.

A good stun weapon will definitely incapacitate with minimal risk of killing. That assumes that you have such a device on you. But currently available models stun, they don't necessarily produce unconsciousness or memory loss. Just in case that's important.
 


Posted by Zero (Member # 3619) on :
 
I think a blow to the head would be overlooked. But I am seriously considering a slight re-write in favor of the cloth drenched in ether (type of approach), it says volumes about the "attacking" character's intent/professionalism.

Thanks all!
 


Posted by cvgurau (Member # 1345) on :
 
There's a spot on the jaw called the Sweet Spot, where, if hit with the right amount of force (which, for this, is much less than a blow to the back of the head, or so I would imagine), it knocks a person right out, and usually without much damage. I've been on the receiving end of one of these (and I've seen a few, as well), and the only damage I sustained was from twisting my ankle when I fell.

And hey! No brain damage! Win-win, isn't it?
 


Posted by Robert Nowall (Member # 2764) on :
 
I'd put what "cvgurau" said right up there with the one about being able to drive the nose bone back into the skull with just the right shot...a spot not quite as sweet as one might believe, and (if it exists at all) too difficult for the Average Joe to master...
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
As I said, the threshhold for knocking someone out can differ a lot from one person to another. cvgurau should avoid a career as a boxer. Some individual humans have such a "Sweet Spot", many do not. Just like some individuals can be rendered unconscious by the sight of blood, but I wouldn't count on it as a way to reliably knock out most people.

Some people can be killed by driving their septum into their frontal lobe...okay, that would kill anyone. But not all humans have a septum that could be disloged intact and driven back into the brain with a single blow from a normal human. Just like you can kill anyone by breaking their neck, but that's easier said than done.
 


Posted by thexmedic (Member # 2844) on :
 
I must have a sweet spot! How exciting.

Also, anyone else worried about how much Survivor knows about this topic?
 


Posted by Robert Nowall (Member # 2764) on :
 
Hey, we all have our specialties...me, I've picked up the most unusual variety of knowledge categories over the years, and though I yield to true experts I still have enormous amounts of worthless trivia to hand. (None of which seems to have any bearing on my writing, unless you count what I learned while writing Internet Fan Fiction.)

Unfortunately, self-defense is not one of them...I know a little, but probably not enough to actually do it...
 


Posted by JamieFord (Member # 3112) on :
 
Go for the jaw:

"...the carotid baroceptors (the things that control blood pressure) are located right below the angle of the jaw. Hitting one of them will cause paroxysms of the heart and could lead to rapid unconsciousness or fibrillation."

Some people have tougher jaws. Some have the proverbial "glass jaw"--one good punch and they're out.

But keep in mind, some people get knocked out cold, while other recover within seconds.

Have fun, don't try this at home kids.
 


Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
I've had a number of bad work related accidents.

1: I was whacked in the face with an iron bar that snapped the septum leaving it floating free, it also opened the nasal cavity so that blood bubbled from a hole near where the nose meets the brow. It did not kill nor knock me out but left me black-eyed and bandaged. (This was the state I was in when I met my wife... hmmm).

2: Another was a severe whack on the forehead when I collided at speed with a basement mooring. The most disturbing thing was that I could not control my eyes, they were shuddering. It was awful. I was totally useless but never lost consciousness.

PS: A friend of mine used to wear his baseball cap under his hard-hat... I don't know why. Anyway, one day a plank fell and hit him on the head, not very hard but a definite whack. Soon blood started pouring out from under his hard-hat. The blow had caused the metal button on the top of the cap to pierce his scalp in a perfect crescent. It was cool.

PPS: I did not contribute much to the discussion but it certainly was cathartic... thanks

[This message has been edited by hoptoad (edited August 21, 2006).]
 


Posted by Jammrock (Member # 3293) on :
 
Anything that causes a sudden, traumatic jarring of the head can knock someone out. That's how boxing works. Eventually the brain literally bounces against the skull and motor skills are lost. Pistol whipping, or a dagger butt, can do it because the point of impact is very small and very hard, so the force of the impact can cause a more dramatic shift in head movement (won't go into the physics, but that's how it works...roughly).

Think of boxing again. The big fat gloves prolong the fight because the surface area of the impact is spread out and cushioned. In the old bare knuckle days a bout rarely lasted more than 3-4 rounds, and usually ended by the first two, because the surface area of the impact was smaller so the damage was more localized and there was less cushion. Now think of a pistol or dagger butt. Relatively same amount of force, but applied in the right place can cause a greater jarring of the brain to render subject unconscious much easier than a fist.

Knocking someone out in this way is called a concussion. These are commonly caused by blows to the side of the head. The temples are the main weak point, followed by the side of te skull's peak and just above the temples.

The junction between the top most vertebrae and skull are a weak point on the human body so hitting someone there will cause it as well. There are also major nerves there that when pinched will do the job. That also makes it a very dangerous place to hit, and could easily paralyse of kill someone if too much force is applied.

Another is an upper cut under the jaw (this is why you see boxers with vicious uppercuts win so much). There is a nerve weakpoint above the jawbone that can temporarily stop motor function.

The nose and temples are other weak spots. The temples are the softest place on the skull, and the nose is just weak.

Any overload to the nervous system will cause unconsciousness as well, though more difficult to do. Thus a sufficiently hard kick to the male genitalia can render man unconscious.

I'm sure there are more nervous weakpoints that experts know, but those are the basics.

Jammrock
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Sensory overload is a good one. It has minimal risk of lethal injury, but it's very difficult to do with any single blow. A secondary insult to a tramatic injury (like a severe burn or gunshot) often works. About boxing, bare knuckle fights don't tend to end in actual knockouts. It's harder to strike a full force blow against the head with your bare knuckles. Those fights tend to end because of body blows. Because the padding of the glove makes body blows far less bruising, it's easy to simply use muscle tension to deflect the force of even a heavy blow. One or two hits will tire you badly, but they don't do the kind of impact damage a bare fist would do. But if you want to hit someone in the head with your bare hand, use the heel or palm rather than your knuckles.
 
Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
What about rear naked choke holds? Would they be quiet enough?
Like hadaka jime. I guess they would be just as quiet as chloroform... ( )

[This message has been edited by hoptoad (edited August 22, 2006).]
 


Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
Or perhaps a little device you press against the brachial plexus that gives a sudden electrical burst to the nervous system. Like a specialised taser...
 
Posted by Jammrock (Member # 3293) on :
 
Choke holds can do it, but unless you properly close th vocal chords they could raise alarm. You'd also have to be very careful because people can fight back while in a choke hold, thus cause a racket enough for people to come to assist. And remember with choke holds that they take longer than what you see on TV. 1-3 minutes if the person doesn't fight back a lot, if they thrash a lot less than a minute, depending on how physically fit they are.


Other knock out blows, if you can catch someone off guard, is under the ribs cage. A strong enough hit will push up the diaphram and shoot all the air out of the lungs, rendering the opponent temporarily unable to respond to attack.

@Survivor: A lot of that depends on weight and strength advantage. If a 300 pounder who is more muscle than fat lays a heavy blow on a 150-200 pounder, it's not going to matter how much muscle tension they can muster, they're going to take damage and possibly go down.

Secondly, bare knuckle fighters don't hit the thick parts of the skull. They aim for the weak points, such as the jawbone, mouth, nose, side of the face (knuckles connect on the cheeckbone), and ear, where a bare knuckle punch can inflict serious damage. All head blows, if land correctly, are done with the pointer and middle finger knuckles doing the majority of the damage. Those knuckles are a strong point on the hand, have a small surface area and provide little padding for the blow, thus inflict the maximum damage to the opponent while causing relatively small damage to the attacker.


Aren't conversations like this fun
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Ditto on choke holds. Someone with strong neck muscles can stay conscious and fighting for a couple of minutes, and with both your arms busy and your legs in the wrong position to do much of anything, you could regret it. On the other hand, many choke holds that offer enough force and control to be effective can accidentally result in death or serious injury.

I have to reiterate the points about boxing. A three hundred pound fighter wearing gloves might well be able to knock a smaller opponent across the room with a body blow, but the actual damage will not be what it could have been without gloves. On the other hand, that same blow delivered against the head will be far more effective with gloves. The relative strength of your knuckles to the target's "weak points" on the head is a huge variable, a bigger variable than relative body mass. It's also a lot more difficult to gauge accurately prior to attempting a blow. Smart bare knuckle fighters don't aim for the head at all, the hard impacts you can deliver with your knuckles are far more effective against softer and more accessible targets on the body. Aiming blows at the head is only advantageous when you're wearing gloves or using a weapon.

This has become a concern in recent years, since it has become apparent that boxing gloves--originally introduced with the idea of making fights safer--dramatically increase the risk of long-term brain damage from even a single bout. More (and far harder) blows to the head, fewer fights decided by injury to the arms and chest, a much greater reliance on knock-outs. All play their part, and all are a direct result of using gloves. If you have the opportunity to get into a fight, try to insist on a bare-knuckle fight. And don't aim for the head except with the heel or palm of your hand. I'd restrict head blows to kicking, myself. But that's a different matter.
 


Posted by J (Member # 2197) on :
 
Don't go for the jaw. A solid hook to the jaw will cause knockout, but it's more likely than not to cause serious damage as well(e.g., in order of decreasing seriousness, broken jaw, dislocated jaw, torn or strained muscles, severed tongue, lost teeth, lacerated lips/cheeks, bruising). That's why professional boxers disdain headgear but will not (cannot) fight or spar without a mouthpiece. The #1 job of that mouthpiece is to keep your jaw in one piece and in the right place (protecting your teeth and lips is important but secondary). A clean punch to the jaw by a man of reasonable strength will at the very least spray some teeth onto the floor.

I boxed at Notre Dame; we studied the causes of knock-out a bit (so as to more reliably cause them). Blows--especially a punch to the jaw--cause unconciousness by forcing the skull to rotate faster than the brain. The brain slams into the wall of the skull, and then it's nighty-night time.

Survivor is right about the gloves, too. They make fights more brutal, not less. And a couple of exceptionally heavy hitters I know used to pack eggcrate foam in their gloves to keep from breaking their hands. There just isn't any way to hit someone in the head without hurting yourself. Strikes to the nose and mouth might leave you with skinned knuckles if you're lucky; solid strikes anywhere else are likely to leave you with a fracture. Sometimes the injuries can be worse (I once saw a guy hit another guy in the face at a party. The victim was knocked out cold. The aggressor had three broken bones and four of the victim's teeth stuck inside of his hand--one of which severed a tendon).

[This message has been edited by J (edited August 24, 2006).]
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Every time you tell that story it gives me the willies
 
Posted by J (Member # 2197) on :
 
It was messy. I was very glad not to be involved.
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
It reminds me of that Far Side where the saurian-type alien with the crappy disguise is saying "Why, yes...I would like...a 'knuckle sandwich'."
 
Posted by Sara Genge (Member # 3468) on :
 
I don't know anything about knocking people out.. but, whatever you do, if your MC gets medical attention, please make sure the doctor is competent. It seems to me that if you need that character for the rest of the story, you'd have to patch him up a bit.
 
Posted by MollieBryn (Member # 3728) on :
 
Or, don't patch him up and let him stagger around in pain for the rest of the story. That could be fun, especially if you want to make other characters uncomfortable:

"What are you staring at?" Hideously Disfigured Character snapped.

"N-nothing," the bellhop stammered. "But...but, sir, your eye..."

"What about my eye?" HDC snarled.

"It's...it's sliding down your cheek, sir. And I think you lost your big toe in our lobby."

Nothing says SC discomfort like a disfigured MC with a chip on his shoulder! Sorry, I have a very strange mind. Eventually I suppose I'll need to check into that.
 


Posted by Wayne (Member # 3675) on :
 
You go, girl! I'm with Mollie on this.

Zero, I like the rag with ether - or some more modern anastheic(sp).

BTW, why don't the airbags ever deploy in movies where the car keeps going and going and going crash after crash after crash?

[This message has been edited by Wayne (edited August 26, 2006).]
 


Posted by sojoyful (Member # 2997) on :
 
Because the stunt cars aren't fitted with them.


 


Posted by sholar (Member # 3280) on :
 
"BTW, why don't the airbags ever deploy in movies where the car keeps going and going and going crash after crash after crash?"

We watched this car chase on tv (normally not my thing, but part of it went right by my house and after seeeing them all speed by me, I wanted to know how it ended) and the guy really abused his car. While we were watching, he hit 2 cars and the news said he had already hit several before. Eventually (after the car tires were blown out and he rammed another car) he drove off the freeway, not realizing that the ravine was full of water and then finally got stuck. Airbag never deployed. How the car was still moving at that point was a mystery to us, but it was real- no effects.
 


Posted by Valtam2 (Member # 3174) on :
 
quote:
In the old bare knuckle days a bout rarely lasted more than 3-4 rounds, and usually ended by the first two, because the surface area of the impact was smaller so the damage was more localized and there was less cushion.

Not completely true. It wasn't strange to see fights ranging from sixty to one hundred rounds in bare knuckle boxing's height. John L. Sullivan himself had fights lasting into the 75th round. They pretty much fought until they couldn't move. I doubt they aimed for the head much, since doing so would likely cause you to break or otherwise injure your hand in a bare knuckle fight, which would severely hamper your ability to continue beating your opponent savagely.
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Well, those were your more skilled boxers, who would hit each other in the shoulders and chest as much as possible while guarding a lot. That kind of attrition strategy was a great way to outlast an inexperienced or weak fighter, but it could go on a really long time if the opponents were both cautious and well matched. Most bare-knuckle fights would end pretty quickly.

A similar principle was behind the invention of modern fencing. When you deal with bladed weapons, caution and finesse beat raw power pretty consistently. If the popular method of dueling involved clubs, fencing would be a very different sport.

As for airbags, they can fail to deploy for a lot of different reasons.
 


Posted by Leila (Member # 3758) on :
 
Hello, I just joined the forum and found this discussion very interesting. To the original question posted by Zero:

"What I need is a believable, realistic, actual way of knocking a person out in one blow without causing them any irrepairable harm or amnesia"

There were several comments about using a rag with ether, chloroform or a more modern anesthetic, and it seems to me that Zero liked the idea. Without adequate experience in boxing or martial arts, in my humble opinion, using an anesthetic agent is actually the best truly reliable way of making someone unconscious. However, as far as "irrepairable harm or amnesia" goes, there are no guarantees.

Anyway, Zero, if you are thinking of going with something like this, in order to make it believable you'll have to create a situation for your character where he/she is capable of obtaining the ether or chloroform in the first place. (Since they're not sold at most pharmacies. As for more modern anesthetics, some of the newer ones evaporate too quickly to be reliable on a rag.

Good luck with your story!
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
If you're skilled you can put someone down without any significant risk of doing major injury. It also depends a bit on the type of anesthetic you use, ether isn't dangerously toxic like some other gases, but it is highly flammable. Don't try the ether soaked cloth on someone who's smoking, cause that will probably kill or maim. You won't get off lightly either.
 
Posted by J (Member # 2197) on :
 
Bumbling wanna-be hitman slaps an ether-soaked rag onto the burning end of the intended victim's cigarette. Hilarity ensues.
 
Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
horse tranquiliser dart

I don't understand why someone with a rag pressed to their face wouldn't thrash and make a racket.
 


Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
especially if they were some sort of 'guard' or 'guardian'
 
Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
what if they were wearing a helmet of some kind, like lots of scifi uber-soldiers do?
 
Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
last one... i promise.

The technique is of certain importance, of equal importance, however, is the attacker 's mindset. He has to attack without reservation and with extreme aggression. To do otherwise, or with hesitation, is to risk failing.

May seem obvious.

Like others have mentioned, there are no guarantees in such situations. However there are opportunities that you either recognise or you don't, that you have the skills to exploit or you don't. The skills and mindset of the attacker are what determines 'how' a situation like this is 'allowed' to develop.

[This message has been edited by hoptoad (edited August 28, 2006).]
 


Posted by J (Member # 2197) on :
 
I'll second that. It's surprisingly difficult to attack someone in cold blood without reservation.

Try this thought experiment. Next time your are out at a mall or on the sidewalk, look at the person in front of you and convince yourself that you are going to punch them in the back of their head as hard as you can. Don't just tell yourself that--make yourself believe it. Make a fist. Clench your fist hard. Increase your pace to close on them. In your mind, keep telling yourself that you will strike as soon as you're close enough. Tense your arm. Imagine the impact. Even draw your fist back a little bit. Obviously, don't actually hit any strangers.

Unless you've spent more than you're fair share of time hitting people, I'll bet you'll be surprised at how internal resistance you feel--how much your subconscious and even your body resists you.
 


Posted by Zero (Member # 3619) on :
 
quote:
Next time your are out at a mall or on the sidewalk, look at the person in front of you and convince yourself that you are going to punch them in the back of their head as hard as you can. Don't just tell yourself that--make yourself believe it. Make a fist. Clench your fist hard. Increase your pace to close on them. In your mind, keep telling yourself that you will strike as soon as you're close enough. Tense your arm. Imagine the impact. Even draw your fist back a little bit. Obviously, don't actually hit any strangers.

Well, you had me with your salesmanship up until that last line. Omit it and then we've got something.
 


Posted by Valtam2 (Member # 3174) on :
 
Best homework assignment ever.
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
If you've just inhaled a lungful of ether, and you've got a wad of cloth pressed firmly against your face, your chances of making more noise intentionally than you'd make by yawning (and not a wookie yawn either) are pretty insignificant.

Non-lethal doses of tranquilizer introduced through intramuscular or subcutaneous injection (the maximum level of precision possible for a dart) will take at least a minute or more to produce unconsciousness. Short of some kind of breakthrough new class of drugs or ultra precise delivery (best bet, a mini-dart in the carotid arteries), there isn't any way that would work fast enough.

As for being committed to actually attacking your target, that's pretty much a given.
 


Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
That's why I said it was obvious. Committed is not the right word though. Extreme aggression is what I mean. No weasly little words here. Violence. (Physical force exerted for the purpose of violating another.)


Sneaking up with ether or chlorophorm won't work. Both take minutes to take effect when used safely. If used unsafely then you don't really care about not killing the target.

quote:

a lungful of ether

Good luck with that. Ether burns mucous membranes around the mouth and nose. Concentrated vapour will at the least cause severe irritation to the nose, throat and lungs and at worst will kill the target. At too high a concentration it is an asphyxiant.

BTW regardless of whether a wad of cloth muffles your yells, you can still stamp, struggle, knock things over, press alert buttons, smash stuff and generally thrash around. Not to mention draw your pistol.

Chloroform is no faster than ether BTW. It replaced ether simply because it is LESS flammable than ether but it is still unsafe to cauterise wounds when using either.

Both have a distinctive — can't sneak up on a trained guard — smell. And both evaporate too fast for you to apply to a cloth at a safe distance and then sneak up.

Unless you want your MC to be subject to the effects of contact with these chemicals, he will have to wear protective items such as gloves and mask at the least. Chloroform permeates the skin and causes irritation, it especially irritates the eyes.

ZERO, I think you will have to understand that there is no way to do what you describe without real risk to the target. Perhaps invent a new liquid that will do the job the way you want it too or just kill the target without angst.

Despite being popular in movies and stuff, the ether over the mouth thing is bunkum.


PS: Link to chlorophorm msds. Page 2 is a treat.

[This message has been edited by hoptoad (edited August 30, 2006).]
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Ether works much faster and is less toxic than chloroform, though it isn't safe to handle. It won't do permanent damage if you know what you're doing and do it right. It is immediately disabling. While the target may be technically conscious for several breaths, serious resistance will be impossible for a human if you time your application right at the beginning of an inhalation. There will not be much in the way of a struggle. It is implausible that the target would be able to think clearly enough to stamp as a means of alerting others before becoming too weak to stamp loudly enough to make any difference.

Extreme aggression is counterproductive in attempting a controlled attack. Committed is the right word. If you're a person who can't attack without driving yourself into a bloodthirsty frenzy, then your chances of carrying out a covert attack are nil no matter what method you use.

Ether does have a distinct smell, and a low molecular weight with high permeability. That can be overcome if you use a syringe or similar device to soak the cloth immediately before application (and while the target is exhaling, as per earlier instructions on the subject). You can also create a more sophisticated delivery system that is more like a glove/mask hybrid, even one where the ether will be injected into the mask only when you apply pressure. I think that's a bit...overinvolved. Specialized tools are a necessary risk point in any covert operation, over-specialized tools increase that risk without providing enough compensating benefit.

The point that chloroform will not work as popularly advertised is taken. I don't recommend it.
 


Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
quote:

It is immediately disabling.

Can you point me to somewhere that will confirm that? Not just anecdotal but real information? It's one thing to say it but another thing to produce evidence for it. In fact everything I've read says otherwise.

This quote is from: (upper case is in original, bolds are mine)

ON THE INHALATION OF THE VAPOUR OF ETHER IN SURGICAL OPERATIONS:CONTAINING A DESCRIPTION OF THE VARIOUS STAGES OF ETHERIZATION, AND A STATEMENT OF THE RESULT OF NEARLY EIGHTY OPERATIONS IN WHICH ETHER HAS BEEN EMPLOYED IN ST. GEORGE'S AND UNIVERSITY COLLEGE HOSPITALS.
BY JOHN SNOW, M.D. UNIV. LOND.

FELLOW OF THE ROYAL MEDICAL AND CHIRURGICAL SOCIETY,
LECTURER ON FORENSIC MEDICINE.

LONDON: JOHN CHURCHILL, PRINCES STREET, SOHO.
1847.

quote:

In the first degree of etherization I shall include the various changes of feeling that a person may experience, whilst he still retains a correct consciousness of where he is, and what is occurring around him, and a capacity to direct his voluntary movements. In what I call the second degree, mental functions may be exercised, and voluntary actions performed, but in a disordered manner. In the third degree, there is no evidence of any mental function being exercised, and consequently no voluntary motions occur; but muscular contractions, in addition to those concerned in respiration, may sometimes take place as the effect of the ether, or of external impressions.In the fourth degree, no movements are seen except those of respiration, and they are incapable of being influenced by external impressions. In the fifth degree, (not witnessed in the human being), the respiratory movements are more or less paralysed, and become difficult, feeble, or irregular.

If a middle-aged man, of about the average size, is supplied with air mixed with vapour of ether, in the proportion of 45 per cent. vapour to 55 per cent. air, and breathes it easily and without obstruction, he usually consumes about two drachms of ether per minute. It is not all absorbed, for a part is expired after passing no farther than the trachea. At the end of the first minute he is usually in the first degree of etherization; of the second minute, in the second degree; of the third minute, in the third degree; and at the end of four minutes, having inhaled an ounce of ether, in the fourth degree. If the inhalation is, now discontinued, he commonly remains in this degree of etherization for one or two minutes, passes gradually back into the third degree, which lasts for three or four minutes, at the end of which time he is in the second degree, which lasts about five minutes, to give place to a feeling of intoxication and exhilaration, which lasts for ten or fifteen minutes or longer before it entirely subsides.


Is this too much to quote here? The url is here.

You have to inhale something like an ounce of ether. How are you going to get someone to do that in one inhalation? Also, if you can manage to apply enough ether to immediately progress a person to the fourth stage, how will you ensure they do not immediately progress to the fifth stage? The stage at which, we now know, death is likely to occur? Just saying, 'well you gotta be properly trained' does not work when the chemical probably doesn't work in desired way in the first place.


PS: SNOPES website (debunking urban legends) comments on a rumour about thieves using ether to knockout people in carparks:

quote:
No, the scenario described above isn't a real danger. No one has reported having been robbed in this manner, save for one woman in 1999 whose claim was suspect (for reasons we discuss below). This legend doesn't even really describe a plausible scenario because, despite what books and TV shows may depict, rendering a person unconscious from a mere sniff or two of some substance is not easy to do. Ether is nasty, volatile stuff that requires a great deal more than a few brief inhalations to knock a person out. In fact, it's hard to think of any substance that could produce the instant unconsciousness described here.

and this comment:

quote:

As Dr. Matthew Barnhill, a toxicologist with the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences noted, it's difficult to imagine what substance could have been used to cause someone to pass out so quickly from a single sniff. Any drug or chemical that could immediately knock a victim out merely through his inhaling it (rather than ingesting or injecting it) would have to be quite potent indeed.


You may be interested in taking a look at Wikipedia: Fictional applications of real materials and look at both chloroform and ether, if you're interested.

Still looking, trying to discover ANYTHING that indicates the ether thing is plausible. So far it is not looking good. Unless there is some secret brand of illegal ninja ether available only from the government.

[This message has been edited by hoptoad (edited August 30, 2006).]
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
The article you quote describes a controlled mixture of ether and air. If you noticed, the article did not say that the patient would absorb an ounce of ether, just that an ounce of ether would be inhaled (and mostly exhaled) under the method described.

If you cover the target's face with an ether soaked cloth, the ratio is more like 90-95% ether vapor to air. That first inhalation is disabling, even if you were using an inert gas the pulmonary shock of not getting any air would ensure the victim's loss of voluntary control over much of the upper body. After only a couple of inhalations, which the target cannot voluntarily control, the target will be reduced to level two. The target is also suffering a compounding effect of anoxia, which is deliberately avoided in the usual applications of anesthesia. Etherization and anoxia combine powerfully in effect, just as do some drug combinations.

Ether has an advantage over other knock-out agents because it has less long term toxicity, and it dissapates fairly rapidly. It also has an effect slope that is steeper in the range where unconsciousness is produced and more gentle where the danger of death is approached. As long as you don't keep applying it when life signs are becoming dangerously suppressed, there is very little danger of accidentally administering a fatal overdose. Once the target stops effective struggling, you allow some air to get past the cloth.

It's an important point that ether will not keep the target unconscious for very long unless it is continuously applied. And it does take skill, your usual criminal is not going to have any reason to go to the effort needed to use it effectively. But it is by no means impossible as a means of quickly and quietly knocking someone unconscious.

Arterial injection remains as a possible means of knocking out a target near-instantaneously and without much risk of permanent injury. But it takes far more skill and expertise.
 


Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
It is easy enough to say that, but I am looking for supporting material that confirms it and I can't find any. Can you?

Right now the idea that a cloth full of ether pressed over a target's face at the precise moment he draws breath so that he inhales a lungful of 90-95% percent ether vapour enough to render him instantly unconcious but not dead or dying is a baseless assertion. Most literature appears to contradict it.

Just one line from a respectable source would settle it as far as I'm concerned.

[This message has been edited by hoptoad (edited August 30, 2006).]
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Sorry, no respectable source would publish that kind of information
 
Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
secret ninja ether

Seriously, though, I want to get to the bottom of it.

[This message has been edited by hoptoad (edited August 30, 2006).]
 


Posted by Leila (Member # 3758) on :
 
Hoptoad, I am not surprised that you've had a hard time finding "credible sources" discussing the usage of diethyl ether. Most current anesthesia textbooks mention it briefly in the history section, however, perhaps this might help.

First of all a little history.

"Ether was not used as an anesthetic agent in humans until 1842, and was not publicized till 1846, when William T.G. Morton conducted the first public demonstration of general anesthesia using ether. Even after the introduction of other anesthetics, ether remained the standard general anesthetic until the early 1960s".

"Clinical Anesthesiology" by Morgan, Mikhail and Murray.

Now more to your question:

"The discovery of ether and chloroform anesthesia in the 1840's demanded certain physical characteristics of these anesthetics. They had to be liquids with apreciable but not excessive saturated vapor pressures at room temperatures. The first vaporizers often were no more than gauze that might cover the mouth and nose. Ether or chloroform dropped onto this cloth mask provided the needed anesthetizing concentration, and the amount of anesthetic required was defined by the patient's response, by a clinical estimate of the "depth" of anesthesia. Anesthesia was less science than art, and so it continued for 100 years."

"The Pharmacology of Inhaled Anesthetics" by Eger, Eisenkraft and Weiskopf.

I'm not sure this exactly answers your question concerning precisely how many breaths would a person need to take to become unconscious (my personal guess is many and it would be a very nasty and uncomfortable process), or how long would they remain unconscious. The truth is, most information we do have is pretty historical since agents like ether and chloroform have been unavailable for medical use for quite some time. I'm sure that if you tried doing a google search you'd come up with all sorts of cool facts, but I'm afraid the only place you may find the detailed breakdown of pharmacokinetics of ether or chloroform in modern literature is in medicinal chemistry textbooks.

And lastly, you mentioned a "secret brand of illegal ninja ether available only from the government", which would be able to knock a person out in one or two breaths. It's not secret and isn't illegal and is used daily in modern anesthesia. It's called sevoflurane. When used in a combination with oxygen and nitrous oxide it can make a person unconscious after literally two or three breaths. Of course the equipment used to deliver it is slightly more sophisticated than a piece of cloth.

[This message has been edited by Leila (edited August 31, 2006).]
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
While technically that is a form of ether, it is rather more difficult to manufacture for illicit use. It's main advantage is that it isn't flammable or potentially explosive like good ol' regular ether. If you're that afraid of blowing yourself up, you shouldn't be trying these kinds of tricks anyway...er, shouldn't be trying them anyway, really
 


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