Woman Left Screaming In Pain After Sex Toy 'Pulled Through Body' During MRI Scan

Updated Jan 17, 2025 | 02:00 AM IST

SummaryBefore an MRI scan, it is important to avoid all metal objects as they can react dangerously to the machine’s powerful magnetic field, causing severe injuries. A patient suffered horrific injuries after leaving a sex toy inserted in their rectum during a medical procedure.
Woman Left Screaming In Pain After Sex Toy 'Pulled Through Body' During MRI Scan

MRI scans are strong diagnostics with high-definition images of what lies inside a body. Strong magnetic fields require precaution, as brought out by an instance where a young woman suffered very serious injuries due to an oversight in a metallic core within a silicone sex toy that she happened to have before the MRI scan. This makes a stark reminder about the potentially deadly consequences of missing metal objects when such procedures are being performed. In April 2023, a 23-year-old woman went into an MRI with a silicone plug containing a metal core that was not known.

She thought that the item is made entirely out of silicone according to the advertising. However, the strong magnetic field of the MRI machine interacted with the hidden metal, dragging the object through her body and causing excruciating pain. According to reports from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the scene was harrowing, with the woman screaming in agony and requiring immediate hospitalization. Despite pre-scan screenings, which are routine prior to a scan, the patient did not inform the facility that the object existed because he presumed it was purely non-metallic. This caused serious injuries that led to the patient's law suit against the manufacturer for deceitful misrepresentations of material content.

MRI machines employ magnets between 0.5 to 3 Tesla (T). This is thousands of times stronger than the Earth's magnetic field. The tremendous force causes ferromagnetic materials, like iron and nickel, to be magnetized quickly and become strongly attracted toward the magnet. Objects as small as hairpins or paper clips will accelerate at 40 miles per hour inside the magnetic field.

The force can lead to catastrophic injuries in items lodged within the body, such as metallic implants or foreign objects. Metallic cores within devices, like pacemakers or intrauterine devices, must be disclosed to radiologists to prevent such complications.

How Metal Objects Interact with MRI Fields?

On these claims, Dr. Adam Taylor, a specialist in human anatomy, weighed his words in a international health website and added that the distance away and mass of this object would increase its velocity towards that of sound, "The acceleration would be phenomenal, but with a metallic core, it can't go anywhere near supersonic speeds. As for the size, the magnetic acceleration to the internal soft tissues would ensure that there could be severe intracranial trauma."

The injuries inflicted in this case likely involved damage to major blood vessels, nerves, or organs, highlighting the devastating impact of even minor oversight during an MRI scan.

This is not an isolated case. There are documented cases of metallic objects causing serious damage during MRI scans with a 65-year-old man with schizophrenia swallowed metal objects, including sockets and a hinge pin. The powerful magnetic field during an MRI scan caused the objects to rupture his stomach, resulting in serious injuries.

A toddler who ingested 11 small magnets perforated his bowel while undergoing a scan, making his case unique. In another deadly but extremely rare incident, there have been people who hide a firearm on themselves during MRI procedures. Magnetic attraction can trigger a discharge in a weapon and has led to some fatal injuries.

These cases emphasize the very strong need for adequate screening and patient education prior to an MRI.

Preventing MRI-Related Incidents

Medical professionals have been trained to avoid risks. This is by properly screening a patient for metallic objects. In general, most pre-scan protocols include:

  • Patients are interrogated about implants, recent surgery or exposures at work related to metals.
  • Radiologists sometimes use handheld metal detectors to search for hidden items.
  • People who work with metal, like welders or machinists, will need additional testing to detect microscopic metal fragments within soft tissues or eyes.

The case emphasizes the importance of product labeling by manufacturers, especially those products that are likely to unintentionally cause harm to health. The patient's assumption that her device was 100% silicone points to a larger problem in consumer markets with misinformation.

It also reminds the patients to report any possible dangers to the medical professionals, no matter how the objects look non-metallic. In sensitive cases, patients can request private discussions with healthcare providers to ensure safety without discomfort.

In the end, it is a joint effort from manufacturers, healthcare professionals, and patients that can prevent such tragedies. Manufacturers must ensure truthful marketing, while healthcare providers should educate patients about the dangers of metal objects in MRI settings. For patients, understanding the risks and actively participating in pre-scan disclosures can be lifesaving.

This young woman's experience is a sobering example of the unforeseen dangers posed by MRI machines when precautions are overlooked. It serves as a wake-up call to address gaps in patient awareness, medical protocols, and product transparency. By learning from this incident, the medical community and the public can work together to ensure MRI scans remain a safe and effective diagnostic tool.

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In Your Teens Itself: Study Finds the Exact Age When You Become Vulnerable to Heart Disease

Updated Apr 19, 2026 | 08:00 PM IST

SummaryIn their teens, when youngsters move away from home for an independent life, their lifestyle choices can affect heart health later.
heart health

Heart diseases claim the highest number of lives globally every year. (Photo credit: iStock)

Heart diseases cause the highest number of deaths globally every year, and over the past few years, cardiovascular complications have been noted among youngsters as well. Research has long shown that body fat accumulation can lead to harmful changes to heart structure. This can be potentially deadly later, and the risks were earlier thought to increase in middle age. However, as per Finnish and UK scientists, the most critical age for a spike in the risk of cardiac conditions is 17. Yes, this is when high levels of body fat become potentially harmful to heart health.

Why is 17 a critical age for heart health?

According to experts at the University of Eastern Finland, 17 is a critical age for young people, as adolescents often move towards a more independent life after that. From moving away from home to changes in diet and lifestyle habits, there is a likelihood that many may adopt unhealthy habits like drinking and smoking. This social shift can, over time, result in fat accumulation, thus posing heart disease risks in the future.

On the other hand, experts say that adolescence is the best time to adopt a healthy lifestyle and lower body fat in cases of childhood obesity. It is the best time to reduce the risk of heart disease, thereby increasing the chances of a healthy adulthood.

For this, scientists tracked 1,803 children aged 9–24 years. They used dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scans to evaluate fat levels in the abdomen and body and to calculate muscle mass. The children had the scans completed at the age of nine, and then were tested again at ages 11, 15, 17, and 24 years. Echocardiography scans were also done at 17 and 24 years to examine heart function and structure, as well as insulin, blood sugar, and cholesterol levels.

Researchers found that from the age of 17, excessive fat (abdominal fat specifically) was linked to structural changes in the heart. This can lead to excessive pressure to pump blood normally, thereby contributing to a heightened risk of heart disease later. The results were published in the European Journal of Endocrinology.

The role of fat in changing heart structure

Researchers found that the heart’s structure can be altered by fat, and this happens primarily through inflammation and high blood pressure. Experts concluded that BMI is a poor marker for calculating fat mass in adolescents and children because they have four times more lean mass than fat mass, and BMI does not distinguish between the two. The study helps us understand that accumulated total abdominal and body fat in late adolescence can adversely affect a growing heart. Therefore, any lifestyle changes that can help lower body fat in adolescence, as early as 17 years, can be beneficial.

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Early-Onset Fatty Liver In Young Indians: Is It A Lifestyle Crisis In The Making?

Updated Apr 19, 2026 | 04:00 PM IST

SummaryNot very long ago, fatty liver disease was considered a condition of middle age. Today, it is increasingly being diagnosed in individuals far younger and far earlier than expected.
Fatty liver

Fatty liver can be caused by excessive alcohol intake or eating too much fatty food. (Photo credit: iStock)

Fatty liver, or non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), refers to the accumulation of excess fat in liver cells in people who consume little or no alcohol. In its early stages, it may seem harmless. However, it is, in fact, the liver’s first warning that the body’s metabolic balance is burdened. What is concerning is who we are now diagnosing. Young adults in their 20s and early 30s, often with no visible signs of illness, are clear evidence of this condition. This is no longer an additional finding but has become routine. Dr Kandarp Saxena, Gastroenterologist, Manipal Hospital, Jaipur, recently spoke about how fatty liver, which is now becoming more common among younger people, may soon become a lifestyle crisis.

A Lifestyle That Directly Impacts the Liver

Irregular eating habits, such as late-night meals or long gaps followed by overeating, can further throw off the body’s natural metabolic balance. Poor sleep adds another layer, affecting insulin sensitivity and fat metabolism. These are not abstract risks but measurable contributors to how and why fatty liver is developing.

Why Most Young Patients Do Not Realise It

Unlike many other conditions, fatty liver does not produce symptoms that prompt early medical attention. In the early stages, the liver continues to function normally, so daily life goes on as usual. There are no obvious signs to suggest that anything is changing beneath the surface.

Most diagnoses in this age group are incidental, detected during routine blood tests showing mildly elevated liver enzymes or through ultrasound imaging done for unrelated reasons. The absence of these symptoms is not a favourable feature. It delays recognition at a stage when the condition is most easily reversible.

The Indian Risk Profile Is Different

The early onset of fatty liver in India cannot be viewed in the same way as in Western populations. South Asians are known to develop metabolic complications at lower body mass indices. This means that even people who appear healthy or not overweight may still carry harmful fat deep inside the body, along with underlying insulin resistance.

When this is combined with rapid urbanisation, less movement in daily life, and a growing dependence on calorie-dense foods, it slowly adds up to a higher overall risk. As a result, fatty liver is appearing earlier and progressing faster in this population.

From Fat Accumulation to Liver Damage

It is important to understand that fatty liver is not a static condition. In some individuals, simple fat accumulation remains stable. In others, it moves beyond fat build-up and starts irritating the liver, leading to a stage called non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). This is important because the liver is no longer just holding fat; it is getting damaged.

As the damage continues, the liver tries to heal, but this repair leaves behind scar tissue, known as fibrosis. Over time, this scarring can build up and start to affect how well the liver works. If it continues, it can lead to cirrhosis, where the liver becomes heavily scarred and begins to struggle, increasing the risk of liver failure and cancer. This progression does not happen abruptly; it occurs over years, often without clear clinical warning, making early identification critical.

Why Early Intervention Is Being Missed

Despite being detectable and reversible in its early stages, fatty liver is often not addressed with the urgency it requires. Mild elevations in liver enzymes are sometimes overlooked. Imaging findings are not always followed up with structured intervention. More importantly, younger patients are less likely to be counselled about long-term risk. There is also a tendency to delay action because the condition does not immediately affect quality of life. This delay allows progression that could otherwise have been prevented.

Treatment Exists—but Depends on Behaviour

There is no single drug that reverses fatty liver in the way lifestyle modification does. Clinical evidence consistently shows that sustained weight reduction, regular physical activity, and dietary changes can significantly reduce liver fat and, in some cases, reverse early damage. However, these interventions require consistency. Short-term efforts do not produce lasting benefit. Without sustained change, the underlying process continues.

A Shift That Needs Recognition

The increasing prevalence of fatty liver in young Indians is not an isolated clinical observation; it reflects a shift in how disease is presented. When a condition that was once seen later in life starts appearing a decade or two earlier, it changes the health trajectory of an entire population. It raises the chances of long-term complications and means people end up living with the disease for much longer. Fatty liver is now emerging as one of the earliest indicators of this shift.

Fatty liver does not begin with symptoms. It begins with accumulation of excess calories, reduced activity, and sustained metabolic imbalance. By the time it is detected, the process is already in motion. The challenge, therefore, is not just in treating the condition but in recognising it early enough to change its course.

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Why Does Donald Trump Stand Like That? The Age Factor Of Poor Posture Explained

Updated Apr 20, 2026 | 12:00 AM IST

SummaryUS President Donald Trump was recently seen standing in a peculiar way, which sparked a debate on social media regarding his health.
Donald Trump

Netizens speculated that Donald Trump might be struggling with age-related posture issues. (Photo credit: X)

The President of the United States of America, Donald Trump, is making headlines again—and not for the best reasons. In a recent picture that is now going viral on X (formerly Twitter), Trump is seen standing with his feet spread wider than shoulder-width apart. In the image, he appears to form an “upside-down V-shape," while his arms are stiffly positioned at his sides. The photograph has sparked a storm on social media, with users questioning why the 79-year-old is standing this way—is it due to a loss of coordination or a consequence of ageing? Some netizens have also speculated that Trump could be relying on a hidden support device, such as leg or hip braces.

Can ageing have an impact on posture?

Remember when teachers at school used to ask you to sit up straight and correct your posture? It turns out that a seemingly innocent slouch can, over the years, lead to a hunched back that is difficult to reverse. However, poor posture can also be a consequence of ageing. Ideally, one should be able to stand upright comfortably. But over time, the spine can develop a permanent curve, resembling a question mark. This condition is known as kyphosis, or, in simpler terms, a hunched back. Minor changes in posture are normal with ageing; however, it is still advisable to consult a doctor if noticeable posture changes occur.

Complications linked to a hunched back

With kyphosis, most people experience mild discomfort. However, other symptoms may include:

  1. Balance issues
  2. Breathing difficulties
  3. Inability to perform daily tasks

How poor posture can cause pain

Poor posture can trigger pain anywhere in the body—from the neck to the ankles. When joint mechanics are affected, it can lead to dysfunction across the body, much like a kinetic chain reaction. Age-related posture problems can impact the discs that act as cushions between the vertebrae, as well as the muscles supporting the spine.

Ageing can, over time, lead to a loss of bone mass due to calcium deficiency. Bones may become less dense and shrink slightly, increasing the risk of falls and fractures. The discs in the spine may also shrink, causing the vertebrae to move closer together, which can affect movement and flexibility.

Is kyphosis inevitable?

Kyphosis is not necessarily an unavoidable consequence of ageing. Keeping the chest, back, and core muscles strong can help prevent posture-related issues later in life. Therefore, it is advisable to incorporate strength training into your routine and focus equally on the core and shoulders.

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