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(This is a copy of an essay that I have
posted many times in internet newsgroups, particularly soc.subculture.bondage-bdsm)
Hi folks,
As many of you know, the subject of breath control play pops
up here from time to time, and I often participate in the
resultant threads.
I notice that I repeatedly tend to post the same basic information
about the physiology of what's involved, and such "re-inventing
the wheel" is unnecessary. I have therefore been working
on a basic "position paper" of what's involved for
some time, and here it is. Assuming that it's factually accurate
(and I cordially invite _informed_ challenge on this point),
this will become my "boilerplate" statement on the
matter.
Given that "any subject can be written about at any length"
it has been a distinct challenge to write this article. I
have tried to keep it short enough so that people will actually
read it, but also make it long enough to cover what I consider
are the important points. I have tried to provide relevant
physiological and biochemical information, but not go so deeply
into detail that the average reader would get lost. I have
tried to provide basic "starting point" references
for my points and concerns for those who wish to research
this matter further on their own (and I certainly encourage
such research), but not to provide such an exhaustive list
of citations that the researcher would become overwhelmed.
Hopefully, my efforts have been at least adequate. My best
wishes to all.
Regards,
Jay Wiseman
The Medical Realities of Breath Control Play
by Jay Wiseman, author of "SM 101: A Realistic Introduction"
For some time now, I have felt that the practices of suffocation
and/or strangulation done in an erotic context (generically
known as breath control play; more properly known as asphyxiophilia)
were in fact far more dangerous than they are generally perceived
to be.
As a person with years of medical education and experience,
I know of no way whatsoever that either suffocation or strangulation
can be done in a way that does not intrinsically put the recipient
at risk of cardiac arrest. (There are also numerous additional
risks; more on them later.)
Furthermore, and my *biggest* concern, I know of no reliable
way to determine when such a cardiac arrest has become imminent.
Often the first detectable sign that an arrest is approaching
is the arrest itself. Furthermore, if the recipient does arrest,
the probability of resuscitating them, even with optimal CPR,
is distinctly small. Thus, the recipient is dead and their
partner, if any, is in a very perilous legal situation. (The
authorities could consider such deaths first-degree murders
until proven otherwise, with the burden of such proof being
on the defendant). There are also the real and major concerns
of the surviving partner's own life-long remorse to having
caused such a death, and the trauma to the friends and family
members of both parties.
Some breath control fans say that what they do is acceptably
safe because they do not take what they do up to the point
of unconsciousness. I find this statement worrisome for two
reasons:
- You can't really know when a person is about to go unconscious
until they actually do so, thus it's extremely difficult
to know where the actual point of unconsciousness is until
you actually reach it.
- More importantly, unconsciousness is a *symptom,* not
a condition in and of itself. It has numerous underlying
causes ranging from simple fainting to cardiac arrest, and
which of these will cause the unconsciousness cannot be
known in advance.
I have discussed my concerns regarding breath control with
well over a dozen SM-positive physicians, and with numerous
other SM-positive health professionals, and all share my concerns.
We have discussed how breath control might be done in a way
that is not life-threatening, and come up blank. We have discussed
how the risk might be significantly reduced, and come up blank.
We have discussed how it might be determined that an arrest
is imminent, and come up blank.
Indeed, so far not one (repeat, not one) single physician,
nurse, paramedic, chiropractor, physiologist, or other person
with substantial training in how a human body works has been
willing to step forth and teach a form of breath control play
that they are willing to assert is acceptably safe -- i.e.,
does not put the recipient at imminent, unpredictable risk
of dying. I believe this fact makes a major statement.
Other "edge play" topics such as suspension bondage,
electricity play, cutting, piercing, branding, enemas, water
sports, and scat play can and have been taught with reasonable
safety, but not breath control play. Indeed, it seems that
the more somebody knows about how a human body works, the
more likely they are to caution people about how dangerous
breath control is, and about how little can be done to reduce
the degree of risk.
In many ways, oxygen is to the human body, and particularly
to the heart and brain, what oil is to a car's engine. Indeed,
there's a medical adage that goes "hypoxia (becoming dangerously
low on oxygen) not only stops the motor, but also wrecks the
engine." Therefore, asking how one can play safely with
breath control is very similar to asking how one can drive
a car safely while draining it of oil.
Some people tell the "mechanics" something like, "Well,
I'm going to drain my car of oil anyway, and I'm not going
to keep track of how low the oil level is getting while I'm
driving my car, so tell me how to do this with as much safety
as possible." (They may even add someting like "Hey,
I always shut the engine off before it catches fire.")
They then get frustrated when the mechanics scratch their
heads and say that they don't know. They may even label such
mechanics as "anti-education."
A bit about my background may help explain my concerns. I
was an ambulance crewman for over eight years. I attended
medical school for three years, and passed my four-year boards,
(then ran out of money). I am a former member of the American
Academy of Family Physicians and a former American Heart Association
instructor in Advanced Cardiac Life Support. I have an extensive
martial arts background that includes a first-degree black
belt in Tae Kwon Do. My martial arts training included several
months of judo that involved both my choking and being choked.
I have been an instructor in first aid, CPR, and various advanced
emergency care techniques for over sixteen years. My students
have included physicians, nurses, paramedics, police officers,
fire fighters, wilderness emergency personnel, martial artists,
and large numbers of ordinary citizens. I currently offer
both basic and advanced first aid and CPR training to the
SM community.
During my ambulance days, I responded to at least one call
involving the death of a young teenage boy who died from autoerotic
strangulation, and to several other calls where this was suspected
but could not be confirmed. (Family members often "sanitize"
such scenes before calling 911.) Additionally, I personally
know two members of my local SM community who went to prison
after their partners died during breath control play.
The primary danger of suffocation play is that it is not a
condition that gets worse over time (regarding the heart,
anyway, it does get worse over time regarding the brain).
Rather, what happens is that the more the play is prolonged,
the greater the odds that a cardiac arrest will occur. Sometimes
even one minute of suffocation can cause this; sometimes even
less.
- Quick pathophysiology lesson # 1:
-
When the heart gets low on oxygen, it starts to fire
off "extra" pacemaker sites. These usually appear
in the ventricles and are thus called premature ventricular
contractions -- PVC's for short. If a PVC happens to fire
off during the electrical repolarization phase of cardiac
contraction (the dreaded "PVC on T" phenomenon,
also sometimes called "R on T") it can kick the
heart over into ventricular fibrillation -- a form of
cardiac arrest. The lower the heart gets on oxygen, the
more PVC's it generates, and the more vulnerable to their
effect it becomes, thus hypoxia increases both the probability
of a PVC-on-T occurring and of its causing a cardiac arrest.
-
When this will happen to a particular person in a particular
session is simply not predictable. This is exactly where
most of the medical people I have discussed this topic
with "hit the wall." Virtually all medical folks
know that PVC's are both life-threating and hard to detect
unless the patient is hooked to a cardiac monitor. When
medical folks discuss breath control play, the question
quickly becomes: How can you tell when they start throwing
PVC's? The answer is: You basically can't.
- Quick pathophysiology lesson # 2:
-
When breathing is restricted, the body cannot eliminate
carbon dioxide as it should, and the amount of carbon
dioxide in the blood increases. Carbon dioxide (CO2) and
water (H2O) exist in equilibrium with what's called carbonic
acid (H2CO3) in a reaction catalyzed by an enzyme called
carbonic anhydrase. (Sorry, but I can't do subscripts
in this program.)
-
Thus: CO2 + H2O H2CO3
A molecule of carbonic acid dissociates on its own into
a molecule of what's called bicarbonate (HCO3-)
and an (acidic) hydrogen ion. (H+)
Thus: H2CO3 <> HCO3-
and H+
Thus the overall pattern is: H2O + CO2
<> H2CO3 <> HCO3- + H+
-
Therefore, if breathing is restricted, CO2 builds up
and the reaction shifts to the right in an attempt to
balance things out, ultimately making the blood more acidic
and thus decreasing its pH. This is called respiratory
acidosis. (If the patient hyperventilates, they "blow
off CO2" and the reaction shifts to the left, thus
increasing the pH. This is called respiratory alkalosis,
and has its own dangers.)
- Quick pathophysiology lesson # 3:
-
Again, if breathing is restricted, not only does carbon
dioxide have a hard time getting out, but oxygen also
has a hard time getting in. A molecule of glucose (C6H12O6)
breaks down within the cell by a process called glycolysis
into two molecules of pyruvate, thus creating a small
amount of ATP for the body to use as energy. Under normal
circumstances, pyruvate quickly combines with oxygen to
produce a much larger amount of ATP. However, if there's
not enough oxygen to properly metabolize the pyruvate,
it is converted into lactic acid and produces one form
of what's called a metabolic acidosis.
-
As you can see, either a build-up in the blood of carbon
dioxide or a decrease in the blood of oxygen will cause
the pH of the blood to fall. If both occur at the same
time, as they do in cases of suffocation, the pH of the
blood will plummet to life-threatening levels within a
very few minutes. The pH of normal human blood is in the
7.35 to 7.45 range (slightly alkaline). A pH falling to
6.9 (or raising to 7.8) is "incompatible with life."
Past experience, either with others or with that same person,
is not particularly useful. Carefully watching their level
of consciousness, skin color, and pulse rate is of only limited
value. Even hooking the bottom up to both a pulse oximeter
and a cardiac monitor (assuming you had either piece of equipment,
and they're not cheap) would be of only limited additional
value.
While an experienced clinician can sometimes detect PVC's
by feeling the patient's pulse, in reality the only reliable
way to detect them is to hook the patient up to a cardiac
monitor. The problem is that each PVC is potentially lethal,
particularly if the heart is low on oxygen. Even if you "ease
up" on the bottom immediately, there's no telling when
the PVC's will stop. They could stop almost at once, or they
could continue for hours.
In addition to the primary danger of cardiac arrest, there
is good evidence to document that there is a very real risk
of cumulative brain damage if the practice is repeated often
enough. In particular, laboratory studies of repeated brief
interruption of blood flow to the brains of animals and studies
of people with what's called "sleep apnea syndrome"
(in which they stop breathing for up to two minutes while
sleeping) document that cumulative brain damage does occur
in such cases.
There are many documented additional dangers. These include,
but are _not_ limited to: rupture of the windpipe, fracture
of the larynx, damage to the blood vessels in the neck, dislodging
a fatty plaque in a neck artery which then travels to the
brain and causes a stroke, damage to the cervical spine, seizures,
airway obstruction by the tongue, and aspiration of vomitus.
Additionally, there are documented cases in which the recipient
appeared to fully recover but was found dead several hours
later.
The American Psychiatric Association estimates a death rate
of one person per year per million of population -- thus about
250 deaths last year in the U.S. Law enforcement estimates
go as much as four times higher. Most such deaths occur during
solo play, however there are many documented cases of deaths
that occurred during play with a partner. It should be noted
that the presence of a partner does nothing to limit the primary
danger, and does little or nothing to limit most of the secondary
dangers.
Some people teach that choking can be safely done if pressure
on the windpipe is avoided. Their belief is that pressing
on the arteries leading to the brain while avoiding pressure
on the windpipe can safely cause unconsciousness. The reality,
unfortunately, is that pressing on the carotid arteries, _exactly_
as they recommend, presses on baroreceptors known as the carotid
sinus bodies. These bodies then cause vasodilation in the
brain, thus there is not enough blood to perfuse the brain
and the recipient loses consciousness. However, that's not
the whole story.
Unfortunately, a message is also sent to the main pacemaker
of the heart, via the vagus nerve, to decrease the rate and
force of the heartbeat. Most of the time, under strong vagal
influence, the rate and force of the heartbeat decreases by
one third. However, every now and then, the rate and force
decreases to zero and the bottom "flatlines" into
asystole -- another, and more difficult to treat, form of
cardiac arrest. There is no way to tell whether or not this
will happen in any particular instance, or how quickly. There
are many documented cases of as little as five seconds of
choking causing a vagal-outflow-induced cardiac arrest.
For the reason cited above, many police departments have now
either entirely banned the use of choke holds or have reclassified
them as a form of deadly force. Indeed, a local CHP officer
recently had a $250,000 judgment brought against him after
a nonviolent suspect died while being choked by him.
Finally, as a CPR instructor myself, I want to caution that
knowing CPR does little to make the risk of death from breath
control play significantly smaller. While CPR can and should
be done, understand that the probability of success is likely
to be less than 10%.
I'm not going to state that breath control is something that
nobody should ever do under any circumstances. I have no problem
with informed, freely consenting people taking any degree
of risk they wish. I am going to state that there is a great
deal of ignorance regarding what actually happens to a body
when it's suffocated or strangled, and that the actual degree
of risk associated with these practices is far greater than
most people believe.
I have noticed that, when people are educated regarding the
severity and unpredictability of the risks, fewer and fewer
choose to play in this area, and those who do continue tend
to play less often. I also notice that, because of its severe
and unpredictable risks, more and more SM party-givers are
banning any form of breath control play at their events.
If you'd like to look into this matter further, here are some
references to get you started:
People with questions or comments can contact me at www.bigrock.com/~greenery
or write to me at Greenery Press, 3739 Balboa # 195, San Francisco,
CA 94121.
Regards,
Jay Wiseman
Copyright issues footnote:
I wrote this article with the hope that it would be widely
read and distributed, and without any particular expectation
of financial compensation in return for writing it. Therefore,
I consent to the following uses of this essay:
- It's fine with me if you read it.
- It's fine with me if you send it, in unaltered form and
including the foreword, in private e-mail to appropriate
others.
- It's fine with me if you post it, as mentioned in point
# 2, to newsgroups and closed mailing lists.
- If you put it up on a private, no-fee-to-access, website,
please put it up as mentioned in point # 2 and include a
link to the Greenery
Press website (www.bigrock.com/~greenery).
- I do require that you get my specific prior permission
before putting this article up on a pay-to-access website,
putting it in a book offered for sale, or otherwise charge
for any sort of access to it.
BRC Notes:
- Links to book titles listed above were added by the BRC
to make it easy for those who wish to order a copy of any
of the books using the BRC's associate link to Amazon.com.
- Greenery Press has now moved to www.greenerypress.com.
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