Yet another Victorian medical question. I'm finding a lot of info about modern opiate overdoses, with it causing fatal respiratory suppression esp. when laced with fentanyl. Not sure how similar it would be with an oral tincture of laudanum, seems it was usually around 10% opium and 50% or more alcohol.
Basically what I need to have happen is a healthy young adult overdoses to be unconscious. Slow breathing and heartbeat, cool skin turning blueish, such that to a casual observer they would appear dead. This is a battlefield situation with numerous dead bodies and not a lot of medical attention. Is it at all plausible that the victim could stay out long enough to be loaded onto a wagon full of corpses and then come to? Looks like the fatal dosage for a non-addict was 100-150 ml. My character drank the laudanum in a suicide attempt, I'm picturing from a small vial that was not full. I want to avoid death obviously and also the brain damage that comes from oxygen deprivation.
Basically what I need to have happen is a healthy young adult overdoses to be unconscious. Slow breathing and heartbeat, cool skin turning blueish, such that to a casual observer they would appear dead. This is a battlefield situation with numerous dead bodies and not a lot of medical attention. Is it at all plausible that the victim could stay out long enough to be loaded onto a wagon full of corpses and then come to? Looks like the fatal dosage for a non-addict was 100-150 ml. My character drank the laudanum in a suicide attempt, I'm picturing from a small vial that was not full. I want to avoid death obviously and also the brain damage that comes from oxygen deprivation.