Quizzes & Puzzles17 mins ago
when your dead...
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just out of interest, what actually happens when you die? I mean obviously you go stiff and your blood is removed - but what is then injected into your body?
Also, what do they do with the blood? Can it be used to treat others (giving blood) - although i dont know if this would be allowed/wanted?
Just curious!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Actually, it's called a trochar... a surgical quality stainless steel tube about one half inch in diameter sharpened and open on the business end and attached to a suction tube on the other... description of how it's used on request.
And the mouth/jaw isn't superglued shut... nor are the orifices sewn shut... but other means are used. Plastic cup like devices are inserted under the eye lids that both hold the lids shut but also keep the lids from sinking in as the eyes lose their pressure. It's really no big deal it's just the western culture's way of feigning sleep in a dead body. Other cultures insist the body be buried before any decomposition sets in, say 24 hours max...
And the mouth/jaw isn't superglued shut... nor are the orifices sewn shut... but other means are used. Plastic cup like devices are inserted under the eye lids that both hold the lids shut but also keep the lids from sinking in as the eyes lose their pressure. It's really no big deal it's just the western culture's way of feigning sleep in a dead body. Other cultures insist the body be buried before any decomposition sets in, say 24 hours max...
when you perform last offices(wash and prep the body for the mortuary) in hospital you have to roll the body side to side to wash, put on the shroud etc quite often they make a groaning noise which is just the air escaping. Its eerie but its amazing how quick you become immune to being around dead bodies.
A small but interesting insight in this process... did you ever notice that the right hand is always crossed over the left? Wonder why it's not the other way? If the left hand were crossed on top of the right, a viewer might be able to look up the sleeve of the deceased... this is deemed as somehow distasteful in our western culture...