Originally posted by curious
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Cyanosis requires a minute or two of a lack of oxygen in order to persist. And it's never on the skin. Well, almost never. If someone had a boil or something, where the skin was stretched the tightest can be blue. But it also would have been dark when she was alive.
Cyanosis is usually in the lips, the fingernails, sometimes the eyelids. And it is in all of those places before it would crop up somewhere else. Her paleness may be genetic, being Nordic and all. I would think most likely it would be from being out in the freezing rain most of the night. Her blood vessels would shrink from the surface of her skin to preserve body heat, and would not return upon her death. The paleness associated with sudden heart attacks is because the blood drains from the extremities to try and protect the heart. So while the victim may be very pale in the face, hands, etc. the torso remains relatively unchanged, because that's where all the blood went.
Personally, I think her paleness was a result of the miserable weather.
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