It is definitely possible. Get checked out with a doctor.
About the same sorts of things that happen if you get stabbed in general, with the added bonuses of the possible transmission of blood-borne diseases (from the person who used it before) and the potential impact of additional insulin in your system. On the plus side, a syringe needle is somewhat smaller than a machete, so the likelihood of bleeding out is lower.
actors used bladders of pigs blood which they burst when they had been stabbed
Not if you're the only one who've ever used them.
It means someone used a sharp object such as a dagger and stuck it through your skin and into your body.
A gas syringe A gas syringe
sterile syringe
3ml syringe
You will need a 0.5cc syringe
Time and amount blood in a syringe from an infected person determines how long HIV virus is still active. Infected blood exposed to air, once dried had died (becomes inert) and is no longer infectious. In a Syringe the life of active HIV cells will die (depending on how much blood is in the syringe) will take from one to four weeks. It is best to always dispose of a used syringe immediately. For HIV (or an infectious agent) to remain active, it needs host cells to reproduce. In a laboratory for instance, a synthetic agent or actual blood cells are kept in a controlled environment so it may be studied. HIV active cells will die almost as soon as blood leaves the body when exposed to air till it dries.
The 18 or 16 size needle can be used in most cases. The 50 ml syringe should do. Small cysts can be drained by using 10 ml syringe.
NaOH
A gas syringe is basically a device that fills up with a gas that is produced and gives a volume for that gas. Gas from a reaction is forced into the syringe due to pressure and the syringe plunger is forced out (just like how you suck up a liquid with a normal syringe). It can be used to detect the volume of gas produced in a chemical reaction for instance.See the Web Links to the left for more information.