|
#1
●
12-26-2021, 04:35 PM
|
|
Brazil - Young Male Robber Dead After Being Shot
Late December 2021 Salvador, Brazil The young man was committing robberies in the area + was shot dead by a man on a motorbike.
__________________ "I'd give the world for the chance just to see your face again. Still I pretend that you're still standing by." |
|
#3
●
12-26-2021, 08:21 PM
|
|
Re: Brazil - Young Male Robber Dead After Being Shot
His pants just accidentally happened to be pulled down.... Is there a medical reason why the eyeballs seem to descend a bit when a person dies? I've noticed that in corpses at the morgue, but this dude JUST died and his eyes already look sunken. Is there a muscle or something that pushes the eyes forward? |
|
#6
●
12-26-2021, 11:36 PM
|
|
Re: Brazil - Young Male Robber Dead After Being Shot
~ The effect is the same as when someone faints, because of a drop in blood pressure, in this case from the injury. ~ Actually the muscles to the eyes stop working & eye control gets lost, which is why the corpses have that 'lost' look. ~ The eyes do not get pushed forward, they just terminally relax from loss of conscious function. ~ And about the pants, the dead robber got robbed. |
|
#7
●
12-28-2021, 01:22 AM
| ||||||||
| My Rank: FIRST LIEUTENANT Poster Rank:238 Join Date: Apr 2010 Posts: 5,940 Mentioned: 4 Post(s) Quoted: 873 Post(s)
| ||||||||
|
Re: Brazil - Young Male Robber Dead After Being Shot
There is a physiological reason, rather than medical. Eye control and eye-hand coordination are extremely complicated functions that require input from several areas of the brain and cerebellum, imagine the muscles in charge of eye movement as a set of servos under the control of a very sophisticated software, when you injure the brain areas involved in eye control it is akin as turning off the computer controlling a set of servos that automatically go to a home position, i.e. dead center (no pun intended). The same happens with the eyes, when the brain is turned off the muscles controlling the eyes stop receiving input from the brain areas controlling saccades and pursuit functions and as they all relax at the same time finally end up set at a home position, which would be dictated by the length of the little muscles. |