The cave party in Oslo: – – Kullos kills!



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Up to 200 people are said to have participated in an illegal party in a cave in Oslo on Sunday night.

The party was held in a bunker on Colletsgate in St. Hanshaugen, and two units went back and forth to power the sound and lighting systems. It also resulted in 25 people being treated for carbon monoxide poisoning at the Oslo University Hospital.

The condition of five of these participants at the party on Sunday afternoon remains serious, but is no longer critical.

“Kullos is killing!” Is the message from the Oslo University Hospital after the incidents last night.

Five seriously injured after party in the cave

Five seriously injured after party in the cave

– Capture space for oxygen

In addition to making experts available for interviews, the Oslo University Hospital also referenced the following YouTube video on Sunday.

The title is the following: “Kullos kills!”.

In the video, Merete Vevelstad, OUS’s chief physician and poisoning expert, explains what carbon monoxide (carbon monoxide) is and how carbon monoxide poisoning affects the body.

In an interview with Dagbladet, repeat the most important points.

– How dangerous is carbon monoxide poisoning?

– It depends on how much carbon monoxide is in the air, how long it stays there, and if you have other underlying diseases.

– How much carbon monoxide is dangerous for a “normal healthy person”?

– You have to focus on whether the person has symptoms or not, but in general it is the case that the more carbon dioxide there is in the air, the more toxic it is. Kullos hijacks the place of oxygen in the blood, and also causes poisoning within the cells.

UNCONSCIOUS: Seven people have been sent unconscious to hospital after what police believe to be an illegal party in a cave on St. Hanshaugen in Oslo last night. Photo: Private / Øystein Andersen / Svein Dybdahl
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Symptoms can be explained

But in diagnosing carbon monoxide poisoning, there is a big challenge, says chief physician Vevelstad.

– The challenge with carbon monoxide poisoning is that the symptoms are non-specific, they often creep in, and you can remember much more. You feel dizzy, perhaps nauseated and have a headache. If you don’t realize you are being poisoned, you may hurt yourself to explain the symptoms and much more.

– Who should contact the health service after the party in the cave tonight?

– Those who do not present symptoms at that time, do not need to contact. If you have symptoms, you should contact the emergency room, especially if you have been affected by consciousness.

– Really dangerous

The Oslo Fire and Rescue Service (OBRE) has an equally clear message for those who participate in or discover parties such as the cave party on Sunday night.

– They must report to the emergency services, because this is really dangerous, says Lars Magne Hovtun, chief of service staff at OBRE to Dagbladet.

He adds:

– These parties are one of the things that most concern us firefighters, because many lives can pass here at the same time.

UNCONSCIOUS: Seven people have been sent unconscious to hospital after what police believe to be an illegal party in a cave on St. Hanshaugen in Oslo last night. Photo: Øystein Andersen / Svein Dybdahl
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Notified the police

Warn was exactly what Matt Vestengen-Cox, 34, who lives near the bunker in Colletsgate, did at 12:30 on Sunday night.

– I passed around midnight twice and saw that there was a rave. I reported to the police half an hour later, he tells Dagbladet.

However, it took more than three hours before the police responded when a patrol passed by the scene and saw several people who appeared to be very involved.

They then went to the bunker, found several people who were or nearly unconscious, and took them away.

Police also received a warning on Saturday morning, when a person informed the police of what was planned. The switchboard sent the information to the information desk in Greenland, Dagbladet confirms. However, it was not followed up.

Dagbladet has been in contact with the police operations center, which does not have the capacity to respond to the evaluations made to it.

He notified the police shortly after midnight.

He notified the police shortly after midnight.

16 percent oxygen

Dagbladet has obtained exclusive photos and videos from inside the cave party.

They show how the disused bunker near Lovisenberg Hospital has been transformed into a rave party, fully equipped with sound and light systems.

When the fire department took measurements there on Sunday morning, only 16 percent oxygen remained in the cave. In ordinary air, there is 20.95 percent oxygen, according to Store norske leksikon.

– I had to breathe out

A party participant Dagbladet has been in contact with recounts how he occasionally had to go outside for fresh air.

The person also experienced that the organizers behind the party at some point lost control after it was flooded with more and more people.

The party must have been organized in connection with a birthday, Dagbladet is informed.

Dagbladet is also informed that there have been similar parties in the bunker in question on several occasions.



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