Posted on 09/26/2013 11:41:40 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Politics aside, Ted Cruzs epic Senate speech raises some health concerns. Isnt it a bad idea to stand and talk for 21 hours without sleep? Dr. Kent Sepkowitz gives his diagnosis.
What do Tea Party darling Sen. Ted Cruz, droves of old-school Communist politburo members, and the straight-arrow, and therefore completely fictional, Sen. Jefferson Smith all have in common? They like to give long speeches. Really long speeches. Speeches so long, in fact, that no one knows what to say or do about them except report that the speeches are mighty long. And perhaps compare them to other really long speechesthe U.S. Senate winner being courtesy of Strom Thurmond, who in 1957 spoke, as part of a filibuster, against the Civil Rights Act for more than 24 hours. (Note that the Cruzathon was technically not a filibuster.)
Leaving aside the why? this raises a second question: How does a human being actually do this? How can you stay awake this long? Much less talk, even if you have what Senator Smith called "a few things I want to say to this body. I tried to say them once before and I got stopped colder than a mackerel." Plus, what about the mammalian issues standing up so long might create: the need to eat and drink a nourishing balanced diet? What about the bathroom issue? What about how boring it must be to talk that long?
Thankfully, ever since a San Diego teenager named Randy Gardner decided to see how long he could stay awake back in the 1960s, science has been fascinated with this topic. Gardner made it for 264 hoursand remains the listed heavyweight championbecause he involved a neurologist who observed his activity and turned it into a medical article. The report is fun to read, especially the patients sleep-deprived delusion that he was a running back, Paul Lowe, who starred then for the San Diego Chargers. But the punchline of the article was that, to the surprise of one and all, there was no lasting neurologic effect. Gardner basically slept off his all-nighter(s) like any self-respecting college student and got back to business, faculties intact. So those hoping that Senator Cruz will somehow damage his Tea Party mind by his long days journey surely will be disappointed.
The issue of how long a human voice can actually blab has not been studied in the same way. The larynx, a.k.a. voice box, is like any other muscle, more or lessthose who dont use it much and then try will be quite hoarse the next day; in contrast, those who are used to talking and talking and talking are in fine shape to keep talking even more. One might worry that we are raising a generation of the weak-voiced, given the presence of email and Twitter and et cetera for those who once enjoyed a good long two-to-three-hour chat on the phone. A veteran speechifier like Cruz, though, raised in the good old Ma Bell days, probably right now feels like a 10- and 15-mile runner who just pushed out and ran a first marathontired and achy and extremely self-pleased. But wanting to speak softly for just a little while. His risk for polyps and the sort of damage actors and singers seem to get is likely low, unless he makes a weekly habit of yakking away.
He need not worry about other aspects of his health, either. As long as he was sipping a little water, perhaps munching a piece of cheese, he will be able to withstand the semi-rigors of 21 hours without a lot of calories with no problem at all. Kidneys and heart and liverall should sail right through.
Now to creature comforts. We know a lot about this because of Texas State Sen. Wendy Daviss then-epic 13-hour filibuster to delay a vote on abortion restrictions. To keep herself free from the need to urinate or even the urge to go, she placed a urinary catheter into her bladder (she actually did much more than thatshe also wore a back brace and running shoes for comfort). Commonly used in hospitals, these catheters are often referred to as Foley catheters to honor their inventor, Dr. Frederic Foley. They can really hurt to place and to remove though a fetish for placing instruments into this delicate area does exist.
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My question is: Did he have to "hold it" for all 21 hours, or did he get bathroom breaks?
Cry me a river. Fisherman, Paramedics, resident doctors, soldiers etc etc etc working REAL jobs, work longer hours every day.
The whole restroom thing would be my issue.
RE: My question is: Did he have to “hold it” for all 21 hours, or did he get bathroom breaks?
Several Senators pitched in for him at critical times.
If I’m not mistaken, they were Rand Paul, Mike Lee, Jeff Sessions and Marco Rubio.
Cruz showed he was willing to stand for something as opposed to falling for anything.
When far leftists do this for abortion and birth control on demand, free top health care for everyone, forcing everyone to accept redefining marriage and so on, it is called being courageous and principled. Genuine small gov’t conservatives doing it are simply lunatic wackjobs /sarc tag just in case it is needed.
I only watched a couple of hours of Sen Cruz’s remarkable oration. I noticed when one of his friends would speak for a bit, it was enough time to use a bathroom or maybe even sit for a bit. I really wanted the camera to pan out so I could see what Sen. Cruz was doing, but it never did - at least not while I was watching.
No bathroom breaks allowed, but there are ways around that need.
I never noticed it bothering any of my ex-wives.
/johnny
They have "Spitoons" left over from the old days. I expect that was his salvation if necessary.
I’m sure the potted plants around the Senate floor got watered.
How bout those Depend thingys for men? I’d do that before inserting a catheter.
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