Is it possible to skin someone alive
Physiological: This device only removes a limited amount of the very uppermost layer of skin. Bleeding is kept to a minimum because the deeper subcutaneous vessels are not damaged. The stripes thus removed will eventually heal, leaving the penitent with scars to remind them of their visit to her majesty's facilities. The penitent is unlikely to die of any immediate complications of the procedure. The procedure is slow, so do allow the penitent to savour the experience!
Technic is also of utmost importance. First time users invariably skive too deeply or just skim the surface. Stretch the skin a bit and aim for a long clean ribbon of skin to be removed! Pain: No question about it, this procedure will hurt like a son of a gun. If you've ever gotten a paper cut or nicked yourself shaving, it's just like that only about a million times worse, because this device is designed to loudly slice your skin off millimetre after excruciating millimetre.
At about 2 mm per second, in order to offer an enhanced experience, a knee to face procedure of about 5 feet in length is seconds of the most exquisite agony the queen can offer her penitents! I already knew that the skin was important, especially for protecting your from external pathogens and etc, but after searching a bit I just realized what should be obvious: your skin is a very vital organ, has a fair amount of blood vessels, helps you to maintain your body temperature, protects you from the environment overall and is FULL of nerves , which is why you have sensibility.
This link will be able to tell you much better than me exactly how it works and how it's like for the victim to be skinned alive. So summing up: can you flay someone and expect them to survive? Yes, if you have some good healing magic at your disposal or if the victim happens to have high grade plot armor.
Otherwise, if the intense blood loss, hypothermia, and what would be severe trauma and shock somehow don't kill the person, the several infections caused by the exposure of muscles, fat and other tissues to the outside environment will do the job.
Could it be done? Maybe, if instead you only remove small bits of skin and not the entirety of it, while also leaving some dermal layers left, it might be possible. Notice that depending on size of the wounds the victim might need medical help if you want them to stay alive. Additionally, you could make it a long term process, by removing bits from various parts, giving some time for the body to handle each wound before inflicting another one, so that you don't give the victim's immune system more problems than it can handle.
If you're successful, you'll have a punishment that hurts quite a lot. And tthough I can't assure you that there'll be physical marks to tell the story, I can guarantee you that there will be psychological ones.
Additionally, you could make the whole process public, to remind the masses every once in a while what happens when you disobey: long, painful, years-long sentences; but ones that get delivered in portions you can handle without dying, because the queen does know mercy at times. Quite gruesome indeed, however, it is not really plausible for a variety of reasons.
Other answers have brought up some of the many difficulties associated with surviving such massive trauma, such as infection, blood lose and hypothermia. Partial debridement is a not uncommon medical procedure for instance in the case of severe burns or necrotising fascitis. She was receiving an antibiotic, but it reacted with a protein in her system such that her skin, effectively delaminated.
Her entire epidermis including her corneas! She was in a hospital for much of the process; she went in fairly early on in the course of her symptoms. Unfortunately, I don't recall what the treatment entailed. Notably, though, she did in fact survive. When she was interviewed for the show, she still had to be incredibly cautious about exposing her skin to sun - she effectively had the skin of an infant. But her skin did regrow, and she was again, at the time the show was filmed doing just fine.
But this is as close as I can come up with to a scenario where someone loses all his skin in a manner which might be survivable: there was no additional trauma to the system, the situation developed while she was in a hospital, and it was not a result of a persistent underlying problem. Edit : quote: Look up debridement. Debridement, though, is the removal of diseased or damaged tissue, not healthy tissue.
I don't know how similar that is; the tissue you're removing isn't functioning correctly as skin in the first place. That may very well be the same condition I saw covered in the documentary. Since you've got more direct information than I do on it obviously , I'll defer to you if I've gotten any details wrong.
That's pretty much what my friend had. He was in hospital when it started, but went in pretty quickly. They put him in a good burns unit straight away. Would unconsciousness keep the person from going into and subsequently dying from shock? The treatment is to smoke a cigarette, and then suck the flesh out of living humans to replenish yourself.
It has been well documented. Actually, consciousness has little to do with shock. Consciousness is a higher-order brain function while shock is part of your innate inner-brain response system. Ars Legatus Legionis et Subscriptor. Die fast. Hat Monster. He should avoid extremes of temperature.
Originally posted by Alamout: The difference between a burn victim and this scenario is, well, the burning. Tom Dunkerton.
Originally posted by Gisboth: quote:. Dr Gitlin. This thread has actually made me feel sick, well done. Control Group. This prolonged death was only awarded to those guilty of treason. One such person was Lui Jin , a sixteenth-century imperial eunuch. However, once the emperor became aware of the situation, he had Lui Jin arrested and sentenced to Ling chi. The former court official was sentenced to 1, cuts a day over a three-day period. This response is caused by nociceptors, sensory nerve cells that respond to pain.
When you are flayed, your skin is literally ripped off, not cut little by little. This ripping motion means that your nerve endings are not severed cleanly; instead, they are torn to shreds, one by one, in a long train of agony. You're going to feel your skin be pulled off your muscles, and you're going to feel your nerve endings dying.
In other words, you're going to feel all of it. As you might guess, having your skin torn off isn't exactly good for your circulatory system, either. There are several ways that flaying can end your life, and one of these is blood loss also called exsanguination. However, this type of death doesn't happen very quickly. Believe it or not, people can actually survive quite a bit of blood loss. You can lose forty percent or even more of your blood before you actually die from it. Assuming you're hanging upside down, as is often the case, you'll see and feel the blood rushing past your face and onto the ground, and it'll be coming from all over your body.
Not exactly a great thing to see as you feel someone peeling the skin off your entire body. Though something else is likely to kill you before this does, infection is a serious problem with flaying. Your skin is a vital organ that protects your blood and muscle from foreign invaders like bacteria and viruses. Without it, every part of your exposed body is open to attack. Infections can get into your blood stream, spread to vital organs, and even make your body septic given enough time.
Assuming you survive long enough, despite the blood loss and pain, the ensuing infection will definitely kill you. As this is happening to you, your brain is going to be getting a ton of signals from the rest of your body. Your nervous system is going to be pretty much screaming for help, and your brain only has a few ways it can possibly respond.
One way it can react is to shut down parts of your body, or shut down the body altogether, and we'll talk about that more a little later. The other is by trying to make you feel better, even as you're beginning to die. When the brain is faced with extreme pain and stress, it begins to release chemicals to counteract these negative feelings.
Some of these chemicals are called endorphins , and they help to transmit electrical signals throughout the body. They act similarly to morphine, numbing you and giving you a feeling of happiness. Of course, these feelings probably won't be enough to even slightly counteract the horror and agony of the experience, but at least your brain is trying. One thing your skin does is keep your body warm. Sure, it doesn't seem that way when you first get out of bed on a cold morning, but your skin is actually one of your strongest defenses against the cold.
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