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I always see on movies people using Hand Chops. I know that this can be lethal to the neck, but does it serve any other purposes?

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  • I think the temple might also work for a knife hand strike but it's better used on the neck/throat.
    – user2932
    Jul 8, 2014 at 20:55

8 Answers 8

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I've read that a chop to the throat can break the clavicle. If you break the clavicle, then if your attacker tries to swing a punch at you he won't be able to because the bone structure allowing him to will be broken. He'll also be in extreme pain as soon as he does. A chop to the throat, if done correctly, can also damage the throat but more importantly his ability to punch if done correctly. Though none of this is guaranteed so you should not rely on one strike to defeat your opponent.

You can also chop his temple. You have a lot of muscle on the side of your hand compared to your palm and the part that isn't muscle on that side is bone. I'm talking about the part of the side you chop with. So, if the first paragraph doesn't answer your question, maybe the second one does. It's most likely not as convenient to chop the temple as punching the temple, i.e. in boxing, but it will sometimes work. It's a lot more convenient to use the neck as your target in my view because you are more likely to hit the clavicle and you possibly could also knock them out there as well.

Hope it helps.

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    Due to its location and anchor points I consider it highly unlikely that a throat chop will break the clavicle - it is more likely to dislodge or dislocate it - this would most likely be due to whiplash rather than the direct impact. A blow to the middle of the clavicle will break it (and it doesn't take much force).
    – slugster
    Jul 9, 2014 at 2:49
  • According to the Peyton Quinn book I've been reading, it can and so can a punch to the throat, if aimed incidentally at the part of the neck where to clavicle is. That is to assume that the punches and/or chops are done correctly.
    – user2932
    Jul 10, 2014 at 5:05
  • The clavicle is anchored at the top of the rib cage/sternum, it's on the periphery of the neck but I would hesitate to say it's part of the neck. It can be dislocated, but that's more from whiplash type movement - if you hit someone in the neck hard enough to achieve this then you've probably near killed them.
    – slugster
    Jul 10, 2014 at 10:44
  • I have actually broken my clavicle, and I had essentially full range of motion while it was broken. I could have thrown a punch. While adrenalized, I didn't actually feel any pain immediately after breaking it (that came later). I would not rely on a clavicle break to incapacitate someone in any way.
    – Zack Bloom
    Aug 30, 2016 at 19:55
  • I think he's mistaken a chop to the throat will break a clavicle, but a hand chop would have the force to break a clavicle, if delivered there. That is actually the standard for breaking the pine boards. A full-thickness, solid, single piece adult pine board (not the ones where sections are glued together that supply companies sell) requires about the same force to break as the amount needed to break the clavicle.... or so I'm told. Sep 27, 2016 at 14:51
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They've actually covered parts of this on the Skeptics SE. Short version, the reduced surface area of the chop lends itself to severely damaging the vertebrae and/or severing the spinal cord through impact. Within the movies, chops were used primarily because it was exotic-looking and it indicated a clear use of eastern martial arts compared to striking the person with a closed fist. In real life, it can be a dangerous move to do because, as mentioned in the other answers, it pits the relatively fragile bones of the phalanges against your target.

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  • I would add that a chop to the suture on the top of the head is often used in Japanese styles. Without going into details about kyusho... lets just say it really hurts.
    – Huw Evans
    Dec 28, 2021 at 16:37
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A chop to the neck can damage the blood vessels (e.g. carotid artery or jugular vein), the airway (e.g. trachea), or the cervical spine. A hit to the neck can also transmit kinetic energy into the spinal column. All of these are potentially lethal.

Strikes to the back of the neck, or at the base of the skull, are especially dangerous. The nearby tissue is responsible for many autonomic functions, including breathing. Damage there can be maiming or lethal. That's why there are no modern forms of sport combat that allow strikes to the back of the head (see e.g. Rule 15.A.xi. in the Unified Rules governing UFC and MMA).

As user2932 says, you can also break the clavicle (i.e. collarbone) at the top of the neck. As that's a structural support for the arms, that's a debilitating injury. It's also possibly fatal, e.g. in case of compound fracture.

The primary "non harmful" use that I know of for neck chops is the brachial stun: a chop to the side of the neck below the ear provides a several-second stunning effect, including pain and disorientation. A loss of sensation and control in the corresponding arm is also common. The attack is named for the brachial plexus, a network of nerve fibers that runs through the neck down to each arm. The vagus nerve also runs through that area; some sources cite it rather than the brachial plexus as the source of systemic disorientation. A number of "real world self defense" moves (e.g. "elbow entrance") and police and military fight training systems emphasize this kind of neck hit as a disorienting / stunning move. Given the proximity of the blood vessels, windpipe, and cervical structure, the brachial stun is still dangerous. There's no place you can hit on the neck that doesn't carry some risk of non-temporary damage and lethality.

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    Compound fractures generally imply risk of infection which can interfere with healing, but in a healthy population, mortality should be low. More interesting are things like penetration of the subclavial artery etc. Jul 17, 2014 at 9:51
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(This answer portrays only to the majority of american karate businesses known as the infamous mcdojo)

It is my (bad) experience with karate where they teach alot of "theory" moves. That being, ones that sound good in theory, but would the actually work? most of these tend to be fake.

Of course, this doesn't apply to the (rare) good karate schools.

Anyway, a knife hand strike can be quite deadly. It depends on how you use it though. Of course, you wouldn't hit somebody on the top of the head like that, but a neck shot seems to be the best (and basically only). There is also another move where your standing to their side, and you do a low knife hand to the "peaches".

Like I said, a knife hand strike can be very powerful. My Sabomnim broke six large bricks with one these strikes, while I have broken 6 boards. Of course, this is on blocks. usually* an attacker will not be on blocks. There are exceptions, but I am yet to come across one yet...

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If you strongly chop the throat hitting the adam's apple or even not, it might cause immediate but temporary asphyxiation or stun which will momentarily stop an opponent to fight. If you strongly chop at the side of the neck it might cause momentary stoppage on the opponent because the carotid arteries are smash and it may cause dysfunction on the flow of blood to the brain. At the nape a chop, may act like a smashing hard pipe, causing immediate death.

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Karate chopped at age 15 on back of neck while standing idle waiting for a bus; loss consciousness for about 10sec. ; was told by witnesses (a gang of 7 young men were running through the streets, practicing on folks). At age 70 developed large orange sized ball-swelling- of fatty content; that’s occasionally painful, slings from the point of contact.

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Each part of your hand (or foot) is a weapon, depending how you hold it and the technique used for striking. In the case of a karate chop, the locked wrist and tense fingers create a blunt surface, it is referred to as a "knife hand". Typically, this strike would use a circular, swinging motion to attack (as opposed to a straight-punch).

Any strike, whether closed or open hand, can be deadly or cause serious injury if it hits a vital point with enough force.

In my experience — more than an attack, which often is to the temple or neck — knife hands are most effective for blocking and then rerouting the opponents arms or legs so you can put them in a lock, or guide your hand to the right spot for a takedown.

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please try letting your throat be tweak even by one finger, or the side of your neck be chop with a little force and feel the effect if a chop to the neck can injure or even kill. Thanks.

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    Is this an answer or a request for more information!?
    – Mike P
    Sep 26, 2016 at 9:02

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