Yes it safe.Its just like putting back from where it came from.If its from someone else then thats a whole different story. However in large quantities it can be dangerous as your body cannot absorb the large amounts of iron in blood and also has difficultly getting rid of it, which can lead to further medical problems. If you only drink around a teaspoon then it's unlikely to have any adverse affects though.
Provided the blood is fresh and all procedures are carried out in sterile conditions then yes. Question is why would you want to?
This will increase the water potential of the blood, and cause your blood cells to burst due to osmosis.
Basically, they take venom from snakes and inject tiny quantities into horses or sheep, which makes the animal immune. They take small amounts of the horse's blood, remove the blood cells, and inject the rest in order to counter the snake venom.
Leeches which suck blood inject substances, like hirudin, which avoid blood clotting and suppress the immunitary reaction.
One time I saw a cat he was very black. HE reminded me of my friend charles he is very hairy and he smells like lemons and hot dogs.
Avascular is the medical term meaning tissues without their own blood supply.
As long as its your own blood, or of the same blood type. As long as its your own blood, or of the same blood type.
Why on earth would you want inject old blood ? I don't know what would happen but I wouldn't imagine it was pretty !!
If its the same blood type, with all the "materials" of the blood, its possible
it may sick you
Glucagon, yes. Cortisol, probably not. Glucagon raises blood sugar. Many type one diabetics own glucagon injectors, so that when their blood sugar goes too low they (or someone with them) can inject them with glucagon. Cortisol does raise blood sugar, but it is not used to raise blood sugar. It's used to treat many other diseases, but not the low blood sugar which type 1 diabetics sometimes get.
it depends were u inject it at
Your blood sugar drops dramatically and you can and will get hypoglycemia (low blood sugar).
To throw in; to dart in; to force in; as, to inject cold water into a condenser; to inject a medicinal liquid into a cavity of the body; to inject morphine with a hypodermic syringe., Fig.: To throw; to offer; to propose; to instill., To cast or throw; -- with on., To fill (a vessel, cavity, or tissue) with a fluid or other substance; as, to inject the blood vessels.
it gets full of blood squirts
inject them with someone elses blood newb
if you inject straight into your body you die!
The pancreas inject insulin to control the sugar.