Bomb319
Bluelighter
First of all, let me categorically state that this question is ONLY intended to satisfy my curiosity in the matter, being a student of pharmacy. I am NOT going to attempt to kill myself, I am NOT thinking of killing myself, and I certainly don't want to encourage OTHER people to kill themselves. It is a matter of interest alone.
Anyway, the reason I am asking this is because I have seen overdoses depicted in films, TV, literature etc. so many countless times, I naturally wonder which is the most realistic (although I recognize that some or all aspects of it cannot be said to be universal, so I have to be exceptionally broad). I suspect that some of these aforementioned depictions are way, waaaaaay off in thinking that the user would simply become higher and higher until he or she pass out cold, failing consciously experience cessation of breathing and other parts of the body shutting down; and then just simply never wake up. Personally, I have trouble buying into this "theory" particularly because a lethal dose of any opiate/opioid is going to stop your breathing entirely - ie, asphyxiation, oxygen starvation, and hypercapnia (high carbon dioxide in the blood) is essentially the same thing as drowning, or breathing in an inert gas such as helium, but without any oxygen. Not to mention the cardiac arrest and massive organ failure that follows.
This process is...painful to say the very least. Hypercapnia in particular is particularly one nasty culprit - research has shown rising blood-carbon dioxide levels to be the trigger that signals the brain to go into panic mode for survival. Build-up of CO2 in the blood is detected by the brain, which strongly activates the adrenal glands and other trigger sites. In addition, aspiration of vomit is also highly likely if not inevitable. Of course, this just blocks the airways further and collects in the lungs - not a pleasant experience.
So would these horrific symptoms not be dominating in opiate OD, with the victim suffering horribly as he or she desperately tries to gulp down air, but is entirely unable because the brain stem is saturated with the signal-blocking drug?
OR - does all this actually occur while you are fully unconscious as is most commonly depicted? I guess the root of this question comes down to whether or not your consciousness can "overpower" the massive chemical releases in the CNS and PNS, because the fight-or-flight response is one of the most primitive as well as most ingrained action the brain can perform, due to obvious evolutionary advantages in doing so.
So then does death occur while awake or while consciousness has already been lost, and absolutely NO pain is felt?
Anyway, the reason I am asking this is because I have seen overdoses depicted in films, TV, literature etc. so many countless times, I naturally wonder which is the most realistic (although I recognize that some or all aspects of it cannot be said to be universal, so I have to be exceptionally broad). I suspect that some of these aforementioned depictions are way, waaaaaay off in thinking that the user would simply become higher and higher until he or she pass out cold, failing consciously experience cessation of breathing and other parts of the body shutting down; and then just simply never wake up. Personally, I have trouble buying into this "theory" particularly because a lethal dose of any opiate/opioid is going to stop your breathing entirely - ie, asphyxiation, oxygen starvation, and hypercapnia (high carbon dioxide in the blood) is essentially the same thing as drowning, or breathing in an inert gas such as helium, but without any oxygen. Not to mention the cardiac arrest and massive organ failure that follows.
This process is...painful to say the very least. Hypercapnia in particular is particularly one nasty culprit - research has shown rising blood-carbon dioxide levels to be the trigger that signals the brain to go into panic mode for survival. Build-up of CO2 in the blood is detected by the brain, which strongly activates the adrenal glands and other trigger sites. In addition, aspiration of vomit is also highly likely if not inevitable. Of course, this just blocks the airways further and collects in the lungs - not a pleasant experience.
So would these horrific symptoms not be dominating in opiate OD, with the victim suffering horribly as he or she desperately tries to gulp down air, but is entirely unable because the brain stem is saturated with the signal-blocking drug?
OR - does all this actually occur while you are fully unconscious as is most commonly depicted? I guess the root of this question comes down to whether or not your consciousness can "overpower" the massive chemical releases in the CNS and PNS, because the fight-or-flight response is one of the most primitive as well as most ingrained action the brain can perform, due to obvious evolutionary advantages in doing so.
So then does death occur while awake or while consciousness has already been lost, and absolutely NO pain is felt?