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Previously on "Hold your Wee for a Wii"

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  • Churchill
    replied
    Originally posted by andy
    does that mean you can kill someone by forcing him to drink lot of water.
    we dont need guns anymore
    Trouble is three quarters of the bastards we want to kill are in the desert...

    Leave a comment:


  • sparklelard
    replied
    Originally posted by andy
    does that mean you can kill someone by forcing him to drink lot of water.
    we dont need guns anymore
    And it's a lot cheaper.

    Leave a comment:


  • Troll
    replied
    When I were a nipper - we used to play a "who can drink the most water" game- cup after cup until capacity was reached- the winner declared, and then off for a long slash in the bogs.
    Didn't kill us - but we were tougher in them days

    Leave a comment:


  • andy
    replied
    does that mean you can kill someone by forcing him to drink lot of water.
    we dont need guns anymore

    Leave a comment:


  • n5gooner
    replied
    ...

    Leave a comment:


  • ASB
    replied
    I see. The CNS falls apart and the messages fail along the way.

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    from Wikipedia

    Body fluids contain electrolytes (particularly sodium compounds, such as sodium chloride) in concentrations that must be held within very narrow limits. Water enters the body orally or intravenously and leaves the body primarily in the urine and in sweat. If water enters the body more quickly than it can be removed, body fluids are diluted and a potentially dangerous shift in electrolyte balance occurs.
    Most water intoxication is caused by hyponatremia, an overdilution of sodium in the blood plasma, which in turn causes an osmotic shift of water from extracellular fluid (outside of cells) to intracellular fluid (within cells). The cells swell as a result of changes in osmotic pressure and may cease to function. When this occurs in the cells of the central nervous system and brain, water intoxication is the result. Additionally, many other cells in the body may undergo cytolysis, wherein cell membranes that are unable to stand abnormal osmotic pressures rupture, killing the cells. Initial symptoms typically include light-headedness, sometimes accompanied by nausea, vomiting, headache and/or malaise. Plasma sodium levels below 100 mmol/L (2.3g/L) frequently result in cerebral edema, seizures, coma, and death within a few hours of drinking the excess water. As with alcohol poisoning, the progression from mild to severe symptoms may occur rapidly as the water continues to enter the body from the stomach or intravenously.

    Leave a comment:


  • ASB
    replied
    Originally posted by Sockpuppet
    Yep.

    If you drink too much water you dilute the electrolites in your body and your nerves can no longer conduct a signal.

    In essence you timeout then die.




    You sure about that? I ask because I have an immune disease. I produce anti bodies to the chemical used to transmit messages across the nerve/muscle junction thus muscle control is seriously impaired.

    How do hydration levels affect the transmission of the signal - I understand they can affect the brain end - so the signals don't get transmitted in the first place but that doesn't seem to be what you are saying.

    Leave a comment:


  • chubba
    replied
    This was the real cause of the death of Leah Betts, the famous "one tab of ecstacy makes your brain swell and kill you" story of the mid nineties when the tabloid hype of the evils of e were at its height.

    Her parents still bang on about it even though they should really be campaigning for better awareness.

    Maybe this poor lady would still be alive of some of the fsckwits at the radio station were aware of the problem.

    Ho-hum, am sure the resulting law suit will get her kiddies an Xbox as well as a wii - good old mum, she didn't die in vain...

    Leave a comment:


  • kramer
    replied
    sounds like god outsourced that little system... no recoverable error handling???

    Leave a comment:


  • Sockpuppet
    replied
    Yep.

    If you drink too much water you dilute the electrolites in your body and your nerves can no longer conduct a signal.

    In essence you timeout then die.

    Leave a comment:


  • ImNotFromIndia
    replied
    "water intoxication" ... when that b.astard Brown finds out he going to put taxes on it.

    Leave a comment:


  • HankWangford
    started a topic Hold your Wee for a Wii

    Hold your Wee for a Wii

    Funny story

    A woman who competed in a radio station's contest to see how much water she could drink without going to the bathroom died of water intoxication, the coroner's office said Saturday.
    http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/01/13/wat....ap/index.html

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