As for these specific examples, we have such a 1999 forensic case report published in the British Dental Journal, Biting Off More Than You Can Chew, which by the way, the researchers note in this “The case report represents a very unusual bite injury and is the most damaging bite injury, in terms of tissue loss, we have seen in more than 40 years of combined forensic experience.” So what was the damage? When the other woman tried to push the gnashing teethed woman away, said biter bit one of the other woman’s fingers, with the combination of bite force and, similar to the aforementioned bar fight, the pulling away force, see the tip of the woman’s finger become detached. But, in the end, it would seem if you ever find yourself in a Jack Reacher-esk situation where someone is going to put a bullet through your brain if you don’t chomp your thumb off, about the only workable strategy here, beyond trying to incapacitate the person with the gun first, would be to first break your thumb somehow, perhaps via curb-stomping it at an odd angle, and then attempting to gnash your way through the skin and supportive tissues at the break point… This would dually be beneficial because if you did it swift enough, the breaking force could be applied before your brain could make you stop.
Author: Karl Smallwood
Published at: 2025-12-27 22:16:32
Still want to read the full version? Full article