This doesn't make sense. The fentanyl in his system alone would easily bring down his levels to the low 90s. Add in the knee and heart problems and the saturation is STILL 98%? Thats hard to believe.
Really does only mean one thing. His heart failed. That's it.
Sure, that's fine, makes sense. But how did 3x the amount of fentanyl not unsaturate his blood? IM GOING TO MISS "FENTANYL FLOYD". Heart Failure Floyd is a shitty shitty nickname.
I am not a doctor, but one probably knows. It makes sense to me that resuscitation efforts like CPR/blowing oxygen into his lungs might increase the oxygenation of his blood if it was done for a while.
There does seem to be some weird unresolved technical stuff here. Was there CO? How much? Does the 98% O2 saturation blow the hypoxia-as-CoD hypothesis out of the water? How does that work? Seems really hard to die from oxygen related issues at 98% saturation.
But what do I know? Not enough to interpret this nonsense.
Because it was 98% at the hospital. It’s pretty standard in a well run cardiac arrest that his levels would be 98%. The CPR and resuscitative measures would ensure that. What we don’t know is his O2 saturation at the time of his cardiac arrest. And really, that wouldn’t be telling you WHY he had a cardiac arrest, be it from drugs or the physical restraint. Any opiate is going to slow respirations and your heart beat, that drops your O2 levels.
All this says was that when he was still dead at the hospital, during CPR and resuscitation, his blood was able to and indeed was carrying oxygen at appropriate levels to support life function. Kinda nothing much here honestly.
"What we don’t know is his O2 saturation at the time of his cardiac arrest."
Which means we don't know if he died from lack of O2 and what information we do have doesn't provide sufficient evidence that he did die from lack of O2. Therefore, reasonable doubt. I'd say there is much there.
This doesn't make sense. The fentanyl in his system alone would easily bring down his levels to the low 90s. Add in the knee and heart problems and the saturation is STILL 98%? Thats hard to believe.
Really does only mean one thing. His heart failed. That's it.
Because it was arythmia. He had a heart attack essentially.
Sure, that's fine, makes sense. But how did 3x the amount of fentanyl not unsaturate his blood? IM GOING TO MISS "FENTANYL FLOYD". Heart Failure Floyd is a shitty shitty nickname.
Opioid tolerance?
I am not a doctor, but one probably knows. It makes sense to me that resuscitation efforts like CPR/blowing oxygen into his lungs might increase the oxygenation of his blood if it was done for a while.
There does seem to be some weird unresolved technical stuff here. Was there CO? How much? Does the 98% O2 saturation blow the hypoxia-as-CoD hypothesis out of the water? How does that work? Seems really hard to die from oxygen related issues at 98% saturation.
But what do I know? Not enough to interpret this nonsense.
Are you saying that you have reasonable doubt!?
He died from his heart attack before the oral dose even really set in. That’s why it wasn’t metabolized into norfentanyl too
Because it was 98% at the hospital. It’s pretty standard in a well run cardiac arrest that his levels would be 98%. The CPR and resuscitative measures would ensure that. What we don’t know is his O2 saturation at the time of his cardiac arrest. And really, that wouldn’t be telling you WHY he had a cardiac arrest, be it from drugs or the physical restraint. Any opiate is going to slow respirations and your heart beat, that drops your O2 levels.
All this says was that when he was still dead at the hospital, during CPR and resuscitation, his blood was able to and indeed was carrying oxygen at appropriate levels to support life function. Kinda nothing much here honestly.
Source: I’m a paramedic.
"What we don’t know is his O2 saturation at the time of his cardiac arrest."
Which means we don't know if he died from lack of O2 and what information we do have doesn't provide sufficient evidence that he did die from lack of O2. Therefore, reasonable doubt. I'd say there is much there.