ChatterBank2 mins ago
Why do people get knocked out?
What does the brain do, or does not do, when this happens? Why do most muscles in the body, such as the legs, go limp but the heart carries on? (unless in extreme circumstances)
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The point about heart muscle is that it has a special property not shared by any other type of muscle in the body. That is, it has a contractile reflex that is not dependant upon signals from the brain. If this were not the case then people with spinal cord injuries would die because their heart would stop. This also explains why people who are called "brain stem dead" still have a pulse. The medulla oblongata, or "brain stem", does not control the heart rate, but it does control the respiration rate, by monitoring carbon dioxide levels in the blood, thus, if your CO2 levels go up, it commands the respiration rate to increase, and vise versa.