Suffocation of Vancouver Sun 's newspaper later confirmed the incident that happened at night: On May 6, 1998, two hikers found two bodies at Camper Creek on the West Coast Trail. In this article I have not mentioned about what the world does with these four meaningless names, such as who the hiker is and who died in the native American. Even if any of these four people are famous, they are neither beautiful nor rich. Only ordinary people gather at a certain night. The encounter was determined by two simple factors: the speed of the hikers along the wet trail and the gas leak rate of the two men choked at the patrol cabin.
Inhalation: This gas is inert and is classified as a simple asphyxia. Excessive concentration inhalation can cause dizziness, nausea, vomiting, loss of consciousness, and death. Misunderstandings, confusion, or self-rescue due to loss of consciousness may cause death. At low oxygen concentrations, unconscious and death can occur within a few seconds without warning. The effect of a simple asphyxic gas is proportional to the degree of reducing the amount of oxygen (partial pressure) in the breathing air. Oxygen can be reduced to 75% of the normal air percentage before significant symptoms appear. This in turn requires the presence of a simple asphyxia concentration of 33% in the air and gas mixture. Serious symptoms may occur when simple asphyxia reaches a concentration of 50%. In a few minutes, 75% of the concentration is fatal
Danger of suffocation - A simple asphyxia is a gas that can potentially be concentrated enough to replace the oxygen in the air (usually about 21%). Hypoxic levels (<19.5%) can cause shortness of breath, increased heart rate, clumsiness, emotional upset, and fatigue. Less oxygen available may cause nausea, vomiting, collapse, convulsions, coma, and death. Exposure to a simple state of death for several minutes may lead to unconsciousness or death. Choking agents include argon, nitrogen or carbon monoxide
Pornographic asphyxia (variously called asphygmatic neutrophilia, hypoxia or respiratory control symptoms) is an intentional limitation of oxygen to the brain for sexual arousal. The term self-asphyxia is used when behavior is performed by one person. In an amateur 's language, people doing this activity are sometimes called tankers. Author John Curra wrote as follows. "The carotid artery (on both sides of the neck) carries oxygen-rich blood from the heart to the brain, dizziness, dizziness, pleasure, all of them increase masturbation."