If you imagine an “X-ray style” visualization of a drink affecting bones, it would be purely symbolic rather than a real medical scan.
You might see a semi-transparent human skeleton in cool blue-gray tones, as if viewed through radiographic imaging. The bones would look slightly less dense or faintly porous in areas, suggesting reduced mineral strength rather than literal damage.
In front of the chest or stomach area, there could be a glass of dark, carbonated drink rendered in a translucent way—bubbles rising upward, with soft highlights. The composition would visually link the drink to the skeletal system using subtle glow lines or fading gradients, implying an association rather than showing actual physical destruction.
The overall tone would resemble a medical infographic mixed with conceptual art: clean, minimal background, high contrast, and a focus on illustrating the idea of “bone health” in a dramatic but educational way rather than depicting a real X-ray or literal harm.