A young woman has reportedly been left with horrific injuries after leaving a sex toy inserted during an MRI scan.
The unidentified 23-year-old had a silicone plug in her rear while undergoing medical imaging and is said to have suffered a dangerous reaction to the scanner.
An MRI scan uses strong magnets and radio waves to create very detailed images of the inside of your body, and it’s important to remove any metal objects from your body before having one.
But unbeknownst to the woman, the sex toy she was using – which she thought was 100 per cent silicone – actually contained metal at its core.
This caused the adult object “to be dragged across her body”, causing the patient to “scream in pain”, according to a report submitted to the US Food and Drug Administration (FSA).
While the incident took place in April 2023, an image purportedly showing the patient’s scan after the event has recently started circulating online, prompting warnings against wearing any metal object during a scan.
“Never wear a lead back to your MRI appointment. My god…. A tweet shared by X user DreadPirateZero recently read.
Alongside the photo of the scan, there was also an image of a text, sent by someone known only as Matt Z.
“Greatest (as) personal injury case I’ve ever heard: Chris Goodnow, a respected Valley attorney, has taken on a client who is suing a sex toy company. Said customer purchased a butt plug that was advertised as “100 percent silicone.” The client wears it to the MRI appointment. To the customer’s dismay, the plug actually has a metal core.â€
He goes on to claim, in very crude detail, that the plug was pulled through the patient’s rectum and up into the chest cavity at “the speed of sound” and that the patient survived with “extensive injuries.”
Understandably, some have cast doubt on the incident, with some noting that before MRI scans, radiographers usually check patients for any metal in their pockets.
According to the official report, which notes an “adverse event” using the common medical device, “the patient was checked and did not discover that she had inserted a ‘butt plug.’
“She went in for the MRI and when it was over and the technician was taking the table out, the patient started screaming.
“The patient stated that she felt nauseous, had pain and felt like she was going to pass out. An ambulance was called for this patient and she was taken to the hospital.â€
The unnamed health professional who submitted the report added: “The patient was checked by the radiologist on site before transport to make sure the patient was OK.
“The patient has yet to return any of our calls to try and follow up to see how she is doing.”
The magnets used in MRI machines are extremely powerful, typically ranging from 0.5 to 3 Tesla (T), which is significantly stronger than a refrigerator magnet (about 0.001 Tesla) and approximately 100,000 times stronger than the magnetic field of Earth. sun reports.
Metals such as iron, nickel and cobalt are strongly attracted to the magnetic field of the MRI and can be drawn to it.
The powerful magnet in an MRI machine can magnetize metal objects, which can then be pulled toward the magnet with such force that the metal opens or tears through soft surfaces, such as human skin.
The strong magnets used during the scan can also affect any metal implants or fragments in your body, such as a pacemaker.
Professor Adam Taylor, an expert in human anatomy at Lancaster University, said MailOnline the sex toy was unlikely to move – at the speed of sound,” as claimed in one of the many posts circulating on social media.
“The speed at which ferromagnetic materials move in an MRI field is proportional to the mass of the object and how far away the magnetic field is,” he said.
“Things like paperclips or hairpins would easily reach 40mph if they are infield.
“Since this ‘toy’ was mostly silicon with a metal core, there is a possibility that it could travel at speed, but not near the speed of sound.
Professor Taylor added that the injuries that can be caused are damage to large blood vessels, nerves or organs that cause traumatic injury and potentially death.
In the past there have been cases where patients have swallowed metal objects and been terribly injured during an MRI scan.
A US man accompanying his mother to her MRI exam was shot in the abdomen when a magnet caused his gun to involuntarily discharge, according to the medical agency Health Imaging.
The story has sparked a backlash online, with some labeling the incident “brutal” and “horrific”.
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Image Source : nypost.com