Answer:
Likely a toxicity or an overdose, both of which are dangerous and potentially fatal
Step-by-step explanation:
An often-used expression is that "the dose makes the poison," when it comes to particular medications because what may be a safe dose for one drug is certainly not a safe dose for another.
However, 24,000 milligrams (mg) or 24 grams (g) of most medications can be lethal. Consider the following: The average 12-ounce sports drink according to the United States Department of Agriculture's Food and Nutrient database has 20 grams of added sugar and that is considered to be quite a high amount. Consuming more than this amount in a medication designed to cause a systemic response when administered at a scale 1000x smaller than what is presented can lead to catastrophic health issues like seizures, coma, death, increased susceptibility for bleeding, hallucinations, delusions, acute onset changes in heart rate and rhythm, things of that nature.
An example we can use to determine just how dangerous this would be is using a fairly routine medication in aspirin. Aspirin is a non-opioid, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) used for mild-to-moderate pain relief, fever relief, and inflammation relief in patients living with rheumatoid arthritis. It has a maximum limit of 4000 mg per day or 4 grams per day, which in the world of pharmacology is a lot of medication -- if a patient needs this much aspirin, the medical team may want to explore a strong analgesic (pain relief medication). 24,000 mg (or 24 g) of aspirin would be 6x this maximum amount, and would cause a mountain of problems, analgesic nephropathy (medication-use-induced kidney damage) possibly being just one of the smaller problems.
If this amount of medication is consumed by you or another person, seek emergency services immediately so healthcare personnel can administer an antidote, a reversal agent, or aid in your body's elimination processes (e.g. induced emesis, diuretic administration to promote urination, laxative administration to induce fecal elimination).