Surgeons remove up to 100 magnets from New Zealand teenager’s intestines
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Hate to see the charge.
But... why?
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Hate to see the charge.
It's going to be attractive, that's for sure.
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It's going to be attractive, that's for sure.
As long as they stay positive.
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Left unanswered: Why would anyone intentionally swallow one magnet, let alone 100? This is like blaming Temu for someone drinking gasoline.
Not sure how a sixth of an inch is relevant.
Design humour aside, I presume they have dirt available. Don't even need to order it online!
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Wait, up to? Like, they don't have a count? Are they sure they got them all?
It's not Pokemon!
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Left unanswered: Why would anyone intentionally swallow one magnet, let alone 100? This is like blaming Temu for someone drinking gasoline.
Isn't the goto for pica corn starch or something? Regardless, there are many safer options. Even chewing on a rubber tire is probably safer as long as you wash it first.
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It's not Pokemon!
Well... Magnemite
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Left unanswered: Why would anyone intentionally swallow one magnet, let alone 100? This is like blaming Temu for someone drinking gasoline.
A 13-year-old boy in New Zealand swallowed up to 100 high-power magnets he bought online, forcing surgeons to remove tissue from his intestines, doctors said on Friday.
After suffering four days of abdominal pain, the unnamed teenager was taken to Tauranga hospital in the North Island. “He disclosed ingesting approximately 80 to 100 5x2mm high-power (neodymium) magnets about one week prior,” said a report by hospital doctors in the New Zealand Medical Journal.
The magnets, which have been banned in New Zealand since January 2013, were bought on the online shopping platform Temu, they said.
An X-ray showed the magnets had clumped together in four straight lines inside the child’s intestines. “These appeared to be in separate parts of bowel adhered together due to magnetic forces,” they said.
wrote last edited by [email protected]I can answer the "let alone 100" part: they get sold as cubes of 216, 512, 1000 tiny magnet balls, or as packs of 80, 100, 200, etc. tiny magnets.
Why would anyone swallow them... the sale is restricted to 13+ or 18+ in most places, but some (including parents) are unaware of the dangers, and they go for like $2 for 100pcs.


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I can answer the "let alone 100" part: they get sold as cubes of 216, 512, 1000 tiny magnet balls, or as packs of 80, 100, 200, etc. tiny magnets.
Why would anyone swallow them... the sale is restricted to 13+ or 18+ in most places, but some (including parents) are unaware of the dangers, and they go for like $2 for 100pcs.


Who on Earth needs 200 "refrigerator magnets" so tiny they make microSD cards look comically large?
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Who on Earth needs 200 "refrigerator magnets" so tiny they make microSD cards look comically large?
wrote last edited by [email protected]Me. Tiny strong magnets, are good for reasonably strong attraction at short distances. Uses so far:
- Magnetic latches for small parts drawers (2 per drawer, 50 drawers)
- Press-fitting a bunch, into molten plastic holes on the back of a digital thermometer (heat makes them lose strength, so the stronger they start, the better)
- Signal for a hall effect sensor (1 sensor, n magnets)
They should always be securely glued in place, though.
I've seen people use thinner ones, inside the lid of a gift box, as a latch. Also as a magnet for a LED throwie.
The problem, is stupidity like this:
Science for Kids: DIY Magnetic LED Lights

Don't let dumb kids anywhere near them!

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Also left unanswered: was this one big mistake or a hundred small ones?
Almost certainly a hundred small ones from the X-Ray in the article, snapped together into rods. Think Geomag but cylindrical.
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Who on Earth needs 200 "refrigerator magnets" so tiny they make microSD cards look comically large?
Could use them for 3d prints To snap together without glue and pegs?
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Left unanswered: Why would anyone intentionally swallow one magnet, let alone 100? This is like blaming Temu for someone drinking gasoline.
A 13-year-old boy in New Zealand swallowed up to 100 high-power magnets he bought online, forcing surgeons to remove tissue from his intestines, doctors said on Friday.
After suffering four days of abdominal pain, the unnamed teenager was taken to Tauranga hospital in the North Island. “He disclosed ingesting approximately 80 to 100 5x2mm high-power (neodymium) magnets about one week prior,” said a report by hospital doctors in the New Zealand Medical Journal.
The magnets, which have been banned in New Zealand since January 2013, were bought on the online shopping platform Temu, they said.
An X-ray showed the magnets had clumped together in four straight lines inside the child’s intestines. “These appeared to be in separate parts of bowel adhered together due to magnetic forces,” they said.
NZ surgeons are contractually obligated to remove up to 100 magnets per patient. beyond that it's extra charge /j