...........................................
Living Without
Food, Water or Sleep
by Anne Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D.
You can live without air
conditioning and indoor plumbing, but there are some true necessities of life.
You can't survive for long
without food, water, sleep, or air.
Survival experts apply the
"rule of threes" to lasting without essentials.
You can go about three weeks
without food, three days without water, three hours without shelter, and three
minutes without air.
However, the
"rules" are more like general guidelines. Obviously, you can last a
lot longer outside when it's warm than when it's freezing.
Similarly, you can last
longer without water when it's humid and cool than when it's hot and dry.
Take a look at what
ultimately kills you when you go without the basics of life and how long people
have survived without food, water, sleep, or air.
How Long Does Starvation Take?
The technical name for starvation
is inanition. It is extreme malnutrition and calorie deficiency.
How long it takes for a
person to starve to death depends on factors that include general health, age, and
starting body fat reserves.
One medical study estimated
the average adults could last from 8 to 12 week without food. There are
documented cases of a few individuals lasting 25 weeks without food.
A starving person is less
sensitive to thirst, so sometimes death is from the effects of dehydration.
The weakened immune system also
makes an individual more likely to catch a fatal infection.
Vitamin deficiency may also
lead to death. If a person lasts long enough, the body starts using protein from
muscles (including the heart) as an energy source.
Usually, the cause of death
is cardiac arrest from tissue damage and electrolyte imbalance.
As a side note, starving
people don't always get inflated stomachs. Stomach distension is a form of
malnutrition from severe protein deficiency called kwashiorkor.
It can occur even with
sufficient caloric intake. The belly is filled with fluid or edema, not gas, as
is commonly thought.
Dying of Thirst
Water
is an essential molecule for life.
Depending
on your age, gender, and weight, you consist of around 50-65% water, which
is used to digest food, carry oxygen and nutrients through the bloodstream,
remove wastes, and cushion organs.
Since
water is so critical, it should come as no surprise that dying from dehydration
is an unpleasant way to go.
Oh,
in the end, a victim is unconscious, so the actual dying part isn't so bad, but
that only occurs after days of pain and misery.
First
comes thirst. You'll start to feel thirsty after losing about two percent of
your body weight.
Before
unconsciousness occurs, the kidneys start to shut down. There isn't
enough fluid to produce urine, so most people stop feeling the need to urinate.
Attempting
to do so anyway can result in a burning sensation in the bladder and urethra.
Lack
of water causes cracked skin and a dry, raspy cough. Coughing won't be the
worst, though.
While
you might be out of fluids, that won't prevent vomiting. The increased acidity
of the stomach can produce dry heaves. Blood thickens, increasing heart
rate.
Another
unpleasant result of dehydration is a swollen tongue. While your tongue swells,
your eyes and brain shrink.
As
the brain shrinks, the membrane or meninges pulls away from the bones of the
skull, potentially tearing. Expect a horrible headache.
Dehydration
eventually leads to hallucinations, seizures, and a coma. Death can result from
liver failure, kidney failure, or cardiac arrest.
While
you might die of thirst after three days without water, there are numerous
reports of people lasting a week or longer.
Several
factors come into play, including weight, health, how much you exert yourself,
temperature, and humidity.
The
record is supposedly 18 days, for a prisoner accidentally left in a holding
cell. However, it's reported he may have licked condensation from the walls of
his prison, which bought him some time.
How Long Can You Go Without Sleep?
Any new parent can verify
it's possible to go days without sleeping. Yet, it's an essential process.
While scientists are still
unraveling the mysteries of sleep, it's known to play roles in memory
formation, tissue repair, and hormone synthesis.
Lack of sleep (called
agrypnia) leads to decreased concentration and reaction time, diminished mental
processes, reduced motivation, and altered perception.
How long can you go without
sleep? Anecdotal reports indicate soldiers in battle have been known to stay
awake for four days, and that manic patients have lasted three to four
days.
Experiments have documented
normal people staying awake for 8 to 10 days, without any apparent permanent
damage after a night or two of normal sleep to recover.
The world record holder was
Randy Gardner, a 17-year-old high school student who stayed awake for
264 hours (around 11 days) for a science fair project in 1965.
While he was technically
awake at the conclusion of the project, he was completely dysfunctional by the
end.
However, there are rare
disorders, such as Morvan's syndrome, which can cause a person to go without
sleep for several months!
The question of how long
people can stay awake ultimately remains unanswered.
Suffocation or Anoxia
How long a person can go
without air is really a question of how long he can go without oxygen.
It's further complicated if
other gases are present. For example, breathing the same air over and over is
more likely to be lethal because of the excess carbon dioxide rather than the
depleted oxygen.
Death from removing all
oxygen (like a vacuum) may occur from the results of the pressure change or
possibly temperature change.
When the brain is deprived of
oxygen, death occurs because there is insufficient chemical energy or
glucose to feed brain cells.
How long this takes depends
on temperature (colder is better), metabolic rate (slower is better), and other
factors.
In cardiac arrest, the clock
starts ticking when the heart stops.
When a person is deprived of
oxygen, the brain can survive for about six minutes after the heart stops
beating.
If cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (CPR) starts within six minutes of cardiac arrest, it's possible
for the brain to survive without significant permanent damage.
If oxygen deprivation occurs
some other way, perhaps from drowning, for example, a person loses
consciousness between 30 and 180 seconds.
At the 60-second mark (one
minute) brain cells start to die. After three minutes, lasting damage is
likely.
Brain death typically occurs
between five and ten minutes, possibly fifteen minutes.
However, people can train
themselves to make more efficient use of oxygen.
The world record holder for
free diving held his breath for 22 minutes and 22 seconds without
suffering brain damage!
Anne Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D.
· Ph.D.
in biomedical sciences from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville - Oak
Ridge National Laboratory.
· Science
educator with experience teaching chemistry, biology, astronomy, and
physics at the high school, college, and graduate levels.
· ThoughtCo
and About Education chemistry expert since 2001.
· Widely-published
graphic artist, responsible for printable periodic tables and other
illustrations used in science.
Experience
Anne
Helmenstine, Ph.D. has covered chemistry for ThoughtCo and About Education
since 2001, and other sciences since 2013. She taught chemistry, biology,
astronomy, and physics at the high school, college, and graduate levels.
She has worked as a research scientist and also abstracting and indexing
diverse scientific literature for the Department of Energy.
In
addition to her work as a science writer, Dr. Helmenstine currently serves as a
scientific consultant, specializing in problems requiring an interdisciplinary
approach. Previously, she worked as a research scientist and college
professor.
Education
Dr.
Helmenstine holds a Ph.D. in biomedical sciences from the University of
Tennessee at Knoxville and a B.A. in physics and mathematics with a minor
in chemistry from Hastings College. In her doctoral work, Dr. Helmenstine
developed ultra-sensitive chemical detection and medical diagnostic tests.
Anne
Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D.
ThoughtCo
and Dotdash
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publication.https://www.thoughtco.com/living-without-food-water-sleep-4138375
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