WildCat
NWO Master Conspirator
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2003
- Messages
- 59,856
Especially a Dodge Dart, going 60 mph...A giant dart could work, even without the poison.
Especially a Dodge Dart, going 60 mph...A giant dart could work, even without the poison.
(originally known as Very Fast Death Factor)
Doesn't the location of the hit also play a significant role? Hitting someone in the lower leg is quite different from hitting the carotid artery, where blood will reach the brain literately within seconds.
McHrozni
Curariform drugs act by "poisoning" the neuromuscular junction. The victim essentially suffocates. These are non-depolarizing receptor blockers. They take, at the very least, minutes to work and are dose-dependent. The currently fastest available one in clinical use is rocuronium.
Personally, the only instantly effective "dart-like" incapacitating contraption I've ever seen is the Taser.
Yes. Of course, a carotid-shot would also imply that the "toxin" would act on the brain and also be instantly transported across the blood-brain barrier. This is not true for curariform drugs, who's site of action is the motor end plate within muscle tissue itself. In that case, transport would be faster if it hit the jugular vein and was circulated systemically first.
I was wondering if anyone would get around to the Tom Clancy book "Teeth of the Tiger". It's supposed 15 second incapacitating time is key to the plot.
Yes. Of course, a carotid-shot would also imply that the "toxin" would act on the brain and also be instantly transported across the blood-brain barrier. This is not true for curariform drugs, who's site of action is the motor end plate within muscle tissue itself. In that case, transport would be faster if it hit the jugular vein and was circulated systemically first.
~Dr. Imago
One asks what you mean exactly by death. If you shot a .38 magnum into the heart, you suffer clinical death almost immediately - the heart stops its rhythmic pumping. But brain death will take anything from 3 to 15 minutes to occur, though it is inevitable. Some people accept that unconsciousness is death, which will happen when the brain reacts to the loss in blood pressure - perhaps ten seconds or so.
In The Lost World (Jurassic Park II), there's a neurotoxin they use in dart-gun form (IIRC) which was claimed could kill before the pain from the dart was felt. Can't remember any detail though. Crichton was fairly good at writing plausible-enough science or pseudo-science stuff.
I remember reading that for the largest dinosaurs, it could take well over a minute for a signal to reach its brain. Maybe that's what he means?
I remember reading that for the largest dinosaurs, it could take well over a minute for a signal to reach its brain. Maybe that's what he means?
I can't believe useful nerve tissue would take that long to transmit. Perhaps the absence of myelin sheaths? How would such slow response ever evolve, and for what reason? And how was this determined from fossilized skeletons?
I recall seeing a show on (something like) National Geographic where Amazon natives extracted poison from the arrow poison frogs. They used it on blow darts to take a monkey. I remember it acting within just a few seconds. I'm trying to find a YouTube of it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0-CEIjBIDMc
Is this it? It takes a few minutes for the poison to work and the natives have to track them.