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  1. Blackout Effect

    Blackout Effect

    1998 · Thriller · 1h 36m

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  2. Plot. Eric Stoltz plays John Dantley, an NTSB officer sent to O'Hare Airport in Chicago to investigate a collision between Global Airlines Flight 1025 (a Boeing 757-200 from Los Angeles to Washington D.C.) and PDO Cargo flight 342 (a Boeing 727-200F flying westbound cargo plane ), where 185 people are killed.

  3. Jan 4, 1998 · With Eric Stoltz, Charles Martin Smith, Denis Arndt, Leslie Hope. There has been a mid-air collision involving a passenger jet and a cargo flight, killing everyone aboard the two planes. The NTSB investigator in charge, whose girlfriend died in the crash, is puzzled.

    • (555)
    • Drama, Thriller
    • Jeff Bleckner
    • 1998-01-04
    • What makes a blackout a “blackout?”
    • What causes a blackout?
    • What happens to the body during a blackout?
    • Can blackouts lead to complications?
    • Are some people more prone to blackouts?
    • Outlook
    • How to prevent blackouts

    A blackout is a temporary condition that affects your memory. It’s characterized by a sense of lost time.

    Blackouts occur when your body’s alcohol levels are high. Alcohol impairs your ability to form new memories while intoxicated. It doesn’t erase memories formed before intoxication.

    As you drink more alcohol and your blood alcohol level rises, the rate and length of memory loss will increase. The amount of memory loss varies from person to person.

    One study estimated that the odds of experiencing a blackout is about 50% when blood alcohol content reaches 0.22 percent. You may not have any memory of the time that’s passed when your blood alcohol content is above that threshold.

    During this time, you may experience:

    •difficulty walking

    There are two types of blackouts: partial and complete.

    If you experience a partial blackout, visual or verbal cues may help you remember forgotten events.

    If you have a complete blackout, memory loss is permanent. Even with cues, you’re unlikely to remember what happened during this time.

    The nature of blackouts makes it difficult for researchers to examine the correlation between memory recall and blackout type.

    Blackouts are often associated with alcohol consumption. For many people, drinking too much alcohol too quickly, or on an empty stomach, can cause a blackout.

    A blackout can also be caused by:

    Alcohol impairs your ability to walk, speak, react, and remember events. It also lowers inhibition, hinders impulse control, and affects decision-making.

    The reward pathway in the brain regulates these activities. Although this part of the brain can build up long-term tolerance to alcohol, this isn’t true of the hippocampus.

    The hippocampus is found deep within the brain. It’s critical to forming memories. The hippocampus can’t develop long-term alcohol toleration. This means it can’t create memories when a blackout occurs.

    It’s important to remember that a blackout isn’t the same as passing out. Someone who passes out has either fallen asleep or become unconscious because they consumed too much alcohol.

    During a blackout, an intoxicated person can still function as normal. They may seem articulate because most parts of the brain are alcohol-tolerant. They can still eat, walk, hold conversations, have sex, drive, and get into fights. They just can’t record any of the memories.

    This seemingly aware state can make it difficult for other people to recognize if a person is in a blackout.

    Heavy drinking may have lasting effects on the brain. These effects range in severity from momentary “slips” in memory to permanent, debilitating conditions. It’s thought that chronic alcohol consumption can harm the frontal lobe. This is the part of the brain that controls cognitive function. The frontal lobe also plays a role in short-term and long-term memory formation and recall.

    Regular damage to the frontal lobe can impair your behavior and personality, how you perform tasks, and how you keep information. It’s thought that binge drinking can impair this part of your brain.

    Binge drinking can affect your ability to:

    •walk steadily

    •make decisions

    •control impulses.

    Most reports suggest middle-age males with alcoholism are more likely to black out. Yet, anyone drinking large amounts of alcohol is at risk for blackouts.

    Young adults in college are also considered at risk. Researchers link that risk to the heavy drinking habits common among many college students.

    Alcohol-induced blackouts differ from person-to-person. The amount you drink, how long it took you to drink, and your physiology play a role in your blackout. These factors also affect how long the blackout will last.

    A blackout ends when your body finally absorbs the alcohol and your brain can make memories again. Sleep helps end blackouts because rest gives the body time to process the alcohol.

    In addition to abstaining from alcohol, moderation and pace are important to preventing blackouts. Avoid binge drinking, which is defined as consuming five or more drinks in about two hours for men, or four or more drinks for women.

    To prevent blackouts, you should:

    •Eat a meal or heavy appetizers before and during alcohol consumption.

    •Drink slowly. Sipping, rather than gulping, can help you keep track of how alcohol is affecting your body.

    •Consider drinking a glass of water between alcoholic drinks to limit how much and how quickly you’re consuming alcohol.

    Keep reading: Alcohol abuse and alcoholism, what are the differences? »

  4. "Blackout Effect" gets off to a good start and ends confused about it's own purpose. With Stoltz at the center as an NTSB sleuth investigating a midair collision, the film takes the audience into the world of commercial aviation and air traffic control.

  5. Released January 4th, 1998, 'Blackout Effect' stars Eric Stoltz, Charles Martin Smith, Leslie Hope, Denis Arndt The movie has a runtime of about 1 hr 36 min, and received a user score of 63...

  6. Jan 4, 1998 · Overview. There has been a mid-air collision involving a passenger jet and a cargo flight, killing everyone aboard the two planes. The NTSB investigator in charge, whose girlfriend died in the crash, is puzzled.

  7. Film Details. Notes. Brief Synopsis. Read More. When an air traffic computer glitch results in a mid-air collision, hundreds of people are killed and air traffic controller Henry Drake is blamed for the crash. Investigator John Dantley tries to determine the true cause of the crash in which his girlfriend has perished. Henry Drake, feeling persec.

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