most people would be dead at around .40 but serious complications can occur as early as .30
Anything is possible, but if you were to have a blood/alcohol level that high, you wouldn't be able to enjoy it. You'd probably be dead!
Really, really drunk. Most people are virtually non-functioning at that level.
A blood alcohol level of 106 is considered very high and can lead to severe impairment of motor skills, decision-making, and coordination. It may result in alcohol poisoning, which can be life-threatening. Immediate medical attention is necessary to prevent further complications.
Alcohol in an autopsy can be detected through blood or urine analysis. Blood is typically the preferred sample due to its higher alcohol content compared to urine. The level of alcohol found in the blood can then be used to determine if it played a role in the individual's death.
As a blood alcohol concentration (by percentage) anywhere between 0.3-0.45 is considered increasingly lethal (with 0.45 being the lethal dose for most people) and 0.5 and above is certain to end life, a blood alcohol concentration of 2.29 would most likely have to be administered post-mortem as the subject would have been dead long before being capable of consuming enough alcohol to achieve this. Such a blood alcohol concentration is unlikely to be dangerous to the dead.
How do you trust what you read or hear? I find it so interesting how many people speak what they think but not what they know. The fact is Yes, it is possible. Tolerance has a lot to do with how high your blood alcohol level may get. We work with many people who easily surpass .40 . In fact we have had clients above a .70 . Just remember tolerence is not an ability but a liability. "No chance, you would be dead long before that. Drinkers take note!!!.At 0.2 you are well into the danger zone, some will die before 0.3 , and few will recover at 0.35 and then with serious brain damage.This about a quarter of the level of your question"
Blood alcohol test.
Blood alcohol rates are given as a percentage in tenths of a percent, so a blood alcohol rate of .725 stone dead. ( I think the highest ever recorded in some one who survived, is 0.65 ) a blood alchol rate of 0.0725 us below the legal limit of 0.08 but is very close, likely to cause driver imparement. Consult your local DMV's Driver Handbook for the definitive answer.
You probably misunderstood him. A blood alcohol of 2% can already be deadly for people who don't drink often. People who drink because they are addicted sometimes get in the news with a blood alcohol of around 4%. With 51% you would have been dead long ago
When a fresh body of water reach below a pH level of 4.o, uninhabitable by even frogs, it is considered dead.
Dead people still have blood, and it is still capable of being tested for some time after death. Even after blood tests are impractical, other tissue fluids may be tested.
If you have a 10% blood alcohol content level, there'll be no need to charge you - you'll be dead. .08% is a DUI under federal law. States, however, are free to impose stricter laws than that, and may charge you with a DUI for having .01 to .05%, whereas drivers under 21 years of age will typically be subject to a zero tolerance law.