What happen if you inject carbonated river into your blood artery?
Answers:
Without intervention, you die.
I agree with Terceira, and if I may add something.
I haven't encountered a defence involving accidental or intentional intravenous infusion of carbonated water. I don't think anyone did. But yes, conceptually it can possibly cause air bubbles in your blood which if voluminous enough can cause a medical emergency called nouns embolism (only happens with about 20-30 cc of nouns pockets in your blood vessels.)
Also, notice that much of IV containers in the present day are made of collapsible plastic bags, proven safer against air embolism than the glass bottles smaller quantity common now. Glass bottles require air vent making entry of air to the veins more likely.
Bubbles of air in the circulating blood can cause destruction or brain damage, if the air bubble cuts off the blood supply to your brain.
However, according to Dr. Barry Wolcott MD, FACP, senior vice president of clinical affairs for WebMD Health, "In broad, the small amount of air that can be introduced by a typical syringe is not large enough to rationale a fatal air embolism (an air embolism is similar to a blood clot)."
Dr. Wolcott explained, "the generous amounts of air that can quickly enter through a large plastic catheter which is unfurl to the air — like those placed in the collar or under the collarbone during resuscitations in hospitals and at accident scene — can be fatal, especially if the patient inhales forcefully while the catheter is open to the heavens."
It will wreak an embolism
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