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Author Topic: JFK's Head Snap and the Implausible Jet-Effect and Neurospasm Theories  (Read 27895 times)

Offline Tim Nickerson

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No one knows is that injury would prevent the neuromuscular spasm. My layman’s eye shows the elbows held very high immediately after z222, but gradually coming down by z312, showing the effects of this bullet was fading away within a few seconds, as sometimes happens after trauma to the spinal cord. Temporary paralysis is common in American football, which goes away in a minute or two, or longer.

The spinal cord was not severed. Tiny chips were dislodged from near the end of a thin fin of bone of one vertebra, but not severed. I don’t think Mr. Sturdivant claimed the President grasped at his throat. I’m sure he would go with Dr. Lattimer’s opinion, that President Kennedy was in the Thorburn position, immediately after the shot at z222. In my layman’s eye, this position was going away by z312, as trauma caused to the spinal cord can be temporary in some cases.

 Thumb1:  The arms do appear to be dropping.


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Offline Joe Elliott

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Thumb1:  The arms do appear to be dropping.

Yes. Comparing frames, z235, z255 and z275:

z235 below:

z255 below:

z275 below:


It seems he was in the full ‘Thorburn’ position in z235 but this position started to fade so after. No indication to my layman’s eyes that the President was permanently paralyzed at this point. So, the neuromuscular spasm hypothesis for z312-z318 cannot be eliminated because of the earlier wounding.

Of course, Dr. Thomas won’t go with the clear evidence of the Zapruder film but with the harder to interpret X-Rays. Although, again, to my layman’s eyes, I don’t see why a few bone chips knocked lose form the end of a ‘fin’ of vertebrae, with the damage as minor and as far from the spinal cord as it can be and still be considered damage to a vertebrae, would be a strong indication of paralysis. To my layman’s eyes. I don’t recall Dr. Wecht, who looked at the X-Rays a lot, ever saying so either.

All Zapruder frames can be seen at:

https://www.assassinationresearch.com/zfilm/

Offline Joe Elliott

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“decerebrate rigidity”, nor “decerebrate reaction”, is not the same thing as “neuromuscular reaction”. No where did Dr. Lattimer or Larry Sturdivan say that.

Definition of “decerebrate rigidity” is defined in:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abnormal_posturing

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Abnormal posturing is an involuntary flexion or extension of the arms and legs, indicating severe brain injury.

I did not find a definition of “decerebrate reaction”, but I assume this is the reaction of an animal, to severe brain injury, where it starts to assume the “decerebrate rigidity” posture.

“decerebrate rigidity” is not too uncommon in animals and is a well-known and studied phenomenon.

A “neuromuscular reaction” or “neuromuscular spasm” is not as well known because it can only occur, as far as I know, from a rifle bullet passing through the brain of an animal. This has not as extensively studied but the 1948 U. S. Army film shows that it is real.

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You know that's false, or else you can't read. As I've pointed out three or four times now, not all neuromuscular reactions are decerebrate reactions, but Sturdivan identified JFK's alleged neuromuscular reaction as a decerebrate reaction. I've already gone over this ground for you in detail and quoted Sturdivan several times in the process.

Larry Sturdivan said the “neuromuscular reaction”, sometimes called the “neuromuscular spasm”, is observed starting 40 milliseconds after impact. He then says “decerebrate reaction” ends about 1 second after impact.

I’ve been told that the “neuromuscular spasm” is a myth. Now, your telling me that it is not a myth but real, a type of “decerebrate reaction”, one of the fairly common reactions of animals to varies severe brain injuries. You CTers can’t have it both ways.



Here is what Mr. Sturdivan said:

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First, we will observe the neuromuscular reaction, the goat will collapse then, and by the wiggling of his tail and the tenseness of the muscles we will see what I think has sometimes been called the decerebrate rigidity, and that takes place about a second after the shot and then slowly dissipates and you will see the goat slump, obviously dead. The decerebrate reaction and terminus of the decerebrate reaction

By which he means:

1.   First the neuromuscular reaction occurs. He later makes this clear that this started after 40 milliseconds.
2.   Then the “decerebrate reaction” starts to take place.
3.   Then the goat reaches “decerebrate rigidity”, it’s final position it took as a result of the “decerebrate rigidity”, after 1,000-milliseconds.

You are accidently, or more likely on purpose, confusing these 3 stages that occurred over a second of time. The “neuromuscular reaction” is not the same as “decerebrate reaction”

Later he states:

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Now, if you will look up at the forehead of the goat you may see a very small white spot, which was not visible on the last frame. If you can't, don't worry about it. What it is is the bullet entering the head of the goat. And if I can make sure that I have it going forward now. Four one-hundredths of a second after that impact then the neuromuscular reaction that I described begins to happen; the back legs go out, under the influence of the powerful muscles of the back legs, the front legs go upward and outward, that back arches, as the powerful back muscles overcome those of the abdomen.

After 40 milliseconds the “neuromuscular reaction” starts. Sometime later, its not important when so Mr. Sturdivan did not specify, the “decerebrate reaction” starts. After 1,000 milliseconds, the “decerebrate reaction” comes to an end and the goat is in “decerebrate rigidity”, its final position.

Only by some willful mis-interpretation does one come to the conclusion that Mr. Sturdivan was describing a single process, a neuromuscular-reaction/decerebrae-reaction/decerebrae-rigidity which came to an end after 1,000 milliseconds. By which, Mr. Sturdivan really meant started after 1,000 milliseconds, not ended.



And you have some sort of parallel argument that because Mr. Sturdivan mentioned that the film was shot at 2,400 frames per second, it allowed him speak of an event that took place over 1,000 milliseconds as taking place over 40 milliseconds. Another bizarre argument that makes no sense.

“About a second” equals about 1,000 milliseconds. There are 1,000 milliseconds in 1 second. So, if the goat began to react “about a second after the shot,” then it began to react about 1,000 milliseconds after the shot. We can reasonably infer that when Sturdivan said "about a second," he meant 800-1100 milliseconds, or perhaps 800-1000 milliseconds, or perhaps 900-1000 milliseconds.

Sturdivan was nice enough to explain that the 24 fps film was a “normal” view and “real time”:

Sturdivan then explained that the second sequence, which is the one that Elliott has been citing, was taken at 2,400 fps, and that in that 2,400-fps film, yes, the goat’s reaction begins about 40 milliseconds, or “four one-hundredths,” after bullet impact:

“Mystery” solved! I say “mystery” because I was frankly a bit baffled by the seemingly impossible speed of the goat’s reaction in the film that Elliott cited. I attributed it to the many differences between goat and human neurobiology and neurophysics (not to mention that the goat’s reaction movements differ markedly from JFK’s). But I also read that goat/sheep/dog/horse and human neuromuscular reaction times are similar—not identical, but similar. Every source I checked said that the fastest human neuromuscular reactions ranged in speed from 100 milliseconds in a few cases to around 200-600 milliseconds in most cases.

One of the most bizarre and incoherent arguments I have ever heard. How does your math work here? If Mr. Sturdivan was describing a 24,000 frame per second film, would that have caused him to claim a 1,000-millisecond event occurred over an interval of 4 milliseconds?

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Offline Joe Elliott

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Lattimer was a fraud who was repeatedly caught misrepresenting his findings and experiments, misrepresenting his sources, rigging his experiments, making erroneous statements, and in a few cases simply making up stuff out of thin air, e.g., his hoax about the Thorburn position.

Dr. Lattimer was a hero, who treated D-Day casualties in the field. And you, YOU, of all people, have the gall to make this charge against him. Well, that was one of the things the men he treated were fighting for. Freedom of speech.

Dr. Lattimer misrepresenting his findings? How about you misrepresenting his work, as relayed by Mr. Sturdivan in his testimony to the HSCA. Your distortions are so gross and massive, it defies belief that this could be the result of honest reading miscomprehension.

I took a course in college once were the professor explained to me that it was common for people to project their own character onto others. I think you do that a lot. You should have had Dr. Zacharko explain this concept to you.

Offline Michael T. Griffith

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I should include Dr. David Mantik's 1998 critique of the neuromuscular-reaction theory, followed by his 2000 critique. Dr. Mantik earned a PhD in physics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and did a post-doctoral fellowship in biophysics at Stanford University. He then took a tenure-track physics post at the University of Michigan. He went on to earn his MD at the University of Michigan, specializing in radiation oncology. A few years later, he joined the faculty at Loma Linda University Medical School. He now works as a radiation oncologist.

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The other traditional explanation for the head snap has been the "neuromuscular reaction." This was first proposed to the HSCA not by any neuroscience specialist, but by a wound ballistics expert based on his viewing old films of goats being shot in the head. To date no official testimony has been obtained from appropriate specialists (the neuroscientists) on this question. At the very least, interspecies differences in neurophysiology would leave this conclusion open at least to some doubt. In addition, the usual reaction to such brain trauma is not the highly directed movement observed in the Zapruder film but rather random muscular activity. Even Alvarez concluded that the highly directional recoil seen in the Zapruder film required the application of an external force.

Yet another objection to the decerebrate rigidity invoked by the HSCA is the time of onset; even the HSCA admitted that this would develop only after several minutes. I have been unable to find any literature references that even hint that this reaction could occur within milliseconds in human subjects-as is required for the head snap as seen in the film. Furthermore, in a large collaborative study (A.E. Walker, Cerebral Death, 1981, p. 33) with over 500 patients who experienced cerebral death, 70% were limp when observed just before death and an additional 10% became limp at about the time of death. At the very least, therefore, based on all of these considerations, the attempt by the HSCA to implicate a neuromuscular reaction is open to serious doubt. Moreover, the minimum requirement has never been met-the appropriate experts have never been officially consulted.

An additional argument against a neuromuscular reaction is that the observed reaction in the film is much too fast to fit with such a reflex. By the analysis of more than one study, within the space of one Zapruder frame interval (55 msec), the head clearly moves backward. Typical human reflex times are 114 to 112 second (250 to 500 msec). This is an extraordinary discrepancy-a factor of 5 to 10, which, all by itself, makes this scenario quite unlikely. (Assassination Science, p. 281, available at https://www.krusch.com/books/kennedy/Assassination_Science.pdf)

Writing two years later in Murder in Dealey Plaza, Dr. Mantik said the following:

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The other explanation offered by Warren Commission supporters-the neuromuscular reaction-has never received any credible support from appropriate experts in the neurosciences. The many arguments against it are also recounted in Assassination Science (1998, pp. 279-284). Nothing new has emerged to resuscitate this idea. (Murder in Dealey Plaza, 2000, p. 343)
« Last Edit: July 06, 2020, 06:33:43 PM by Michael T. Griffith »

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Offline Tim Nickerson

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"The motion of the President's head as shown in the Zapruder film does not indicate the direction of the shot in my opinion, but the visible blow-out of tissue and bony fragments in frame 313 and subsequent frames do conclusively indicate the bullet came from behind. The head motion subsequently is interpreted as due to involuntary muscle extension and not due to the direction of the injury."

--Dr. Fred Hodges, Chief of Neuroradiology at Johns Hopkins Hospital, President of the Society of American Neuroradiology, and later Professor of Radiology at Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology at Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.

Neuroradiology is the clinical sub-specialty concerned with the diagnostic radiology of diseases of the central nervous system, brain, head and neck, through the use of x-ray, MRI, CT and angiography.

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"Immediately after the shot through the head the President took rather abruptly an almost erect position before slumping over to the left. This straightening is to be considered a sudden opisthotonic reflex movement due to decerebration."

-- Richard Lindenberg, M.D,  Director of Neuropathology for the State of Maryland, Clinical Professor in Forensic Pathology and Lecturer in Neuroanatomy at University of Maryland

Neuropathology is the study of diseases of the brain, spinal cord, and nerves.

Offline Joe Elliott

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"The motion of the President's head as shown in the Zapruder film does not indicate the direction of the shot in my opinion, but the visible blow-out of tissue and bony fragments in frame 313 and subsequent frames do conclusively indicate the bullet came from behind. The head motion subsequently is interpreted as due to involuntary muscle extension and not due to the direction of the injury."

--Dr. Fred Hodges, Chief of Neuroradiology at Johns Hopkins Hospital, President of the Society of American Neuroradiology, and later Professor of Radiology at Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology at Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.

Neuroradiology is the clinical sub-specialty concerned with the diagnostic radiology of diseases of the central nervous system, brain, head and neck, through the use of x-ray, MRI, CT and angiography.

====================================================================================

"Immediately after the shot through the head the President took rather abruptly an almost erect position before slumping over to the left. This straightening is to be considered a sudden opisthotonic reflex movement due to decerebration."

-- Richard Lindenberg, M.D,  Director of Neuropathology for the State of Maryland, Clinical Professor in Forensic Pathology and Lecturer in Neuroanatomy at University of Maryland

Neuropathology is the study of diseases of the brain, spinal cord, and nerves.

Yes, but a Chief of Neuroradiology at John Hopkins won’t rank as high as a Professor of Psychology at Carleton University, in the opinion of Mr. Griffith, I bet. Heck, I doubt Dr. Hodges ranks as high as an entomologist. Dr. Hodges had an opinion that Mr. Griffith disagrees with, and that reason alone thoroughly discredits him.

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Offline John Iacoletti

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Joe Elliott seems to think that sarcasm and snark make his arguments more compelling.