Shifty
Member
some of you guys are still confusing hydraulic effect with "hydrostatic shock"
outside of the temporary cavity created by very high velocity rounds, the pressure exerted upon the bodies vascular system is significantly less than the stress created from a regular heartbeat. LOL with me here people, it will not reverse bloodflow, starve or overfill the brain or organs, or cause them to magically shutdown from a pressure shock. that is what hydrostatic shock theory was believed to be. an attempt to explain why sometimes, game animals (and people) sometimes just dropped in their tracks after being shot.
there is the neurological shock/impact theory (different from, but similar to psychologic shock). a massive shock to the nervous system by powerful extensive nerve damage outside of the actual CNS itself, not directly a head or spine shot.....but at what point does it cause permanent versus temporary incapacitation, and how variable is it. (body size, muscle density, mental state, etc) as far as i know, it has not been accurately measured, (imagine trying to get approval for that study) proven or disproven.
outside of the temporary cavity created by very high velocity rounds, the pressure exerted upon the bodies vascular system is significantly less than the stress created from a regular heartbeat. LOL with me here people, it will not reverse bloodflow, starve or overfill the brain or organs, or cause them to magically shutdown from a pressure shock. that is what hydrostatic shock theory was believed to be. an attempt to explain why sometimes, game animals (and people) sometimes just dropped in their tracks after being shot.
there is the neurological shock/impact theory (different from, but similar to psychologic shock). a massive shock to the nervous system by powerful extensive nerve damage outside of the actual CNS itself, not directly a head or spine shot.....but at what point does it cause permanent versus temporary incapacitation, and how variable is it. (body size, muscle density, mental state, etc) as far as i know, it has not been accurately measured, (imagine trying to get approval for that study) proven or disproven.