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Permanent Effects Of Chinese Knockout

Permanent effects of Chinese knockout?

I just did Chinese knockout two times is there permanent effects were you breath in and out for 20 secs and after hold in the breath and get your chest pushed by somebody what are the permanent effects because I'm upset I did it and don't worry I won't do it again

What are the consequences of a Chinese knockout?

Chinese knockout? Never heard of it, I think you mean “blood choke”, a term we use in the martial arts alongside it’s cousin, “air choke”. (There can also be “neck hold” (used in law enforcement), or “strangle” / “stranglehold” is used in the medical field). So no sense creating another kind of confusing terminology. Judo also has its differentiation, too, compounding the problem.The urban dictionary describes the concept as a choke around the neck which cuts off blood to the brain.So you’re asking about what happens when someone is rendered unconscious due to loss of pulmonary flow to the brain.The result is a cerebral ischemia, which can lead to cerebral hypoxia (a deprevation of air), which can lead to stroke or cerebral infarction (death of brain tissue).An air choke can lead to the same, but it requires more force due to the biomechanical properties of the lyrinx, or because of the position of the mouth and nose - depending on the method of choke or suffocation.A blood choke can indirectly cause an air choke by cutting off blood flow to the brain, which leads to no blood to the lungs, which leads to no air to the brain - a very circuitous route. But a blood choke is easier to perform - and faster - due to the biomechanical properties and position of the carotid and jugular.The answer to your question, then, is (depending on how long the blood choke is maintained):UnconsciousnessStrokeDeath

What are the long term side effects from getting knocked out?

What are the long term side effects from getting knocked out?The same as for concussion.Long-term Effects of Brain Injuries

Is the nerve attack from Kung Fu Panda based on truth?

Um, no Jeremy, I was not talking about that. I know that that is complete nonsense. I'm talking about the move Oogway (which I just learned is turtle in Chinese) uses to defeat Tai Lung, and then the move Tai Lung uses to immobilize the Five.

If there is a massive EMP event, will technology end permanently?

This car is EMP proof:No, it has nothing special. It was just a simple normal civilian run-off-the-mill Toyota Hilux N30 made between 1978 and 1983. The only reason it's EMP proof is because it has no critical electronics to be disabled and fried by an EMP. This is true to many other technology that is not reliant on electronics as well.Like this one:Or this:See, electronics are recent inventions, and while they are so ubiquitous now, it wasn’t so 30–40 years ago. Any technologies back then with no electronics can survive EMP just fine. Even recent technologies can survive EMP with appropriate shielding such as hardened military electronics or underground bunkers containing them.So while EMP can be devastating to infrastructure and economy, even destroying large amount of scientific data, it won’t knock us back to stone age. Be prepared though, because no matter what kind of technology they have, human are inventive, sometimes destructively so.

What causes you to get knocked out/go unconscious?

Here is a simple answer from a simple magazine:Popular Science... Here's how it happens: The body contains dissolved sodium, potassium and calcium, collectively known as electrolytes, which are responsible for conducting impulses along neurons. Every time a fighter receives a blow to a nerve, potassium leaves the cell and calcium rushes in, destabilizing the electrolyte balance, while the brain does all it can to keep these levels in balance. With each successive blow, this balance becomes harder and harder to maintain, and more and more energy must be spent in the process. When the body reaches the point where the damage outweighs the body's ability to repair itself, the brain shuts down to conserve enough energy to fix the injured neurons at a later point.Sounds about right...I know calcium in the brain cells is the death Nell for those brain cells in that 6-10 minutes of anoxia, (diminished oxygen) after clinical death from heart stoppage.

Do electromagnetic pulses completely destroy all electronics and electrical devices or just disable them? How do you shield a room from electromagnetic pulses?

In general, NO.99% of the folk stories you hear (both from movies, TV and, sadly, the government and academics) are dead wrong.  Nuclear EMP does and can not destroy "everything electronic".The primary electric system nuclear EMP would damage would be the electric power grid and that's about it.  It wouldn't be permanent because damaged components can be replaced.  That might take time because most heavy electric components are no longer manufactured in the United States and must be imported from China.  That is made worse because of "Just-in-Time" inventory practices, which dissuade power companies from having locally stored inventories in the US in quantities likely required (inventories are taxed or otherwise penalized).The primary Epic Fail of "EMP wolf-cryers" is that you must efficiently couple energy of the right frequencies to a sensitive device to cause any damage.  It's like they never took a physics class.  For the most part EMP has the wrong combination of both frequencies, coupling factors and power levels to do much damage to things of human scale size like radios, cars, cell phones, etc. from direct exposure.  The more likely risk is from currents coupled in via the power grid but there are things that can be done to avoid that.  The US military routinely does such things using what are similar to "surge suppressors" and other shielding techniques.

Is it true that punching hard things toughens your fists?

NO! Not at all. And if you try you will irreversibly damage your fist. People have got to stop believing Kung Fu Flicks, it is all Fiction!A Boxer’s bread and butter are their fists. There is a reason why they take care of them to the extreme. Back when boxing used to be bare knuckled, almost every fight would end in hands being fractured, and sometimes early in the fight where the bout would end prematurely. The hand isn’t made to be used as a weapon physically. The bones between the knuckles and wrist are as delicate as chicken bones. When they come into contact with something as hard as someones forehead, which is the hardest bone in the human body, they can break and cause Boxer’s fractures which will ruin your hand and your hand will never be the same. Once gloves were introduced, countless boxer’s careers were saved. They preferred the gloves as fights would last longer and even more knockouts would occur. Gloves actually make the force behind a punch more blunt and more damaging to the brain. Bare knuckled would mostly cause cuts and fracture bones.Kung Fu flicks trick the naive martial arts nerd into thinking they can make their hand into iron weapons by punching into a bucket of sand and gradually moving up to rocks, False. Your hand will not grow stronger nor develop resistance, you are weakening your bones and shortening your career with them. These monks who actually practice these tactics do not make a career out of fighting, they do not even train to fight. Being a monk is the most obscure thing in the world in my opinion, they are pacifist who learn martial arts for its own definition, as an art and not to be used in combat sports. So do yourself a favor and don’t damage your own body, believe science over Chinese folklore. My trainer has some torqued up hands from just punching heads and punching bags and I guarantee you even though he can’t break cinderblocks he can knockout more people than a monk could. Hope that helps.

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