Final answer:
The body can isolate a glass shard through an immune response and inflammation, which may lead to eventual expulsion as the skin sheds. Glass particles are unlikely to enter small blood vessels due to their size and shape, and if they do, they're more likely to be encapsulated than to circulate freely or dissolve. Clinical observations of glass particles reducing in size may be due to the breakdown of inflamed tissue over time, not due to dissolution by blood compounds.
Step-by-step explanation:
The human body has several mechanisms to deal with foreign objects like a speck of glass that penetrates the skin. If the glass shard does not cause immediate harm by traveling further into the body, the body's immune system may respond with inflammation, which helps to encapsulate and isolate the foreign material. Over time, this encapsulation might be ejected with the skin's natural shedding process.
Concerning the glass entering blood vessels, it is highly unlikely since capillaries and venules have very small internal diameters, restricting the entry and mobility of glass shards. Moreover, the shape of glass particles makes them prone to getting snagged, rather than flowing freely. Injected glass shards would provoke an inflammatory response, leading to their encapsulation within the tissues, rather than dissolving in the bloodstream. Glass is highly resistant to blood compounds and does not dissolve in neutral environments.
The mentioned clinical studies may refer to specific conditions under which glass particles might get reduced over time, but the process is not directly linked to the properties of blood. It is more related to the body's response to a foreign body with an inflammatory capsule possibly becoming less dense or breaking down over an extended period, not actual dissolution of SiO2 by blood. It is essential to understand the difference between clinical observations and the mechanistic biochemistry within the body.