'Thought I'd start a new thread on this.
I appreciate people have their opinions in terms of the witnesses and so on, and that is being discussed on another thread.
What about the medical evidence alone? What does it suggest?
According to Dr Blackwell, this was a comparatively slow death. That being the case, Liz wouldn't have been dying silently: she would have been spluttering and gurgling. How did say Louis Diemschutz happen upon a Liz who had just been killed but wasn't dying 'comparatively slowly'?
On the other hand, Dr Phillips' testimony adds this: the cause of death had been undoubtedly the loss of blood from the left carotid artery and the division of the windpipe.
My understanding is that a severed carotid artery would cause a very, very quick death. The reason being that certain arteries are especially vulnerable to rapid bleed-outs, including the aorta, femoral or carotid artery; because these are the main blood vessels responsible for pulling oxygen-rich blood from the heart to the rest of the body. In the event one of these arteries is punctured, the trauma can result in an immediate blood pressure drop and extremely rapid blood loss.
Just a few thoughts to begin with.
Has anyone looked at the medical statements alone and what they may mean for TOD? Does anyone see a conflict in the medical opinions of Dr Phillips and Dr Blackwell?
I appreciate people have their opinions in terms of the witnesses and so on, and that is being discussed on another thread.
What about the medical evidence alone? What does it suggest?
According to Dr Blackwell, this was a comparatively slow death. That being the case, Liz wouldn't have been dying silently: she would have been spluttering and gurgling. How did say Louis Diemschutz happen upon a Liz who had just been killed but wasn't dying 'comparatively slowly'?
On the other hand, Dr Phillips' testimony adds this: the cause of death had been undoubtedly the loss of blood from the left carotid artery and the division of the windpipe.
My understanding is that a severed carotid artery would cause a very, very quick death. The reason being that certain arteries are especially vulnerable to rapid bleed-outs, including the aorta, femoral or carotid artery; because these are the main blood vessels responsible for pulling oxygen-rich blood from the heart to the rest of the body. In the event one of these arteries is punctured, the trauma can result in an immediate blood pressure drop and extremely rapid blood loss.
Just a few thoughts to begin with.
Has anyone looked at the medical statements alone and what they may mean for TOD? Does anyone see a conflict in the medical opinions of Dr Phillips and Dr Blackwell?
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