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“ we don’t feel comfortable doing your MRI”
WTF???
Been having problems with my lower back since last April. Turns out I need some minor surgery to rectify things. So, of course, before I can get that done, I have to get an MRI. So my doctor calls the local imaging company that does such things. The imaging company calls me and tells me due to the amount of shrapnel in my body they don’t feel “Comfortable“ doing it, and suggests my doctor contact one of the local hospitals to do it. I told them very little of it is steel fragments. Most of it are lead pellets from, I think, an angry Cuban with a shotgun I met during operation just cause. So now I have to wait until my doctor find a hospital that is “comfortable“ with doing my MRI. I guess things could be worse and I could be stuck with hoping the VA would do this. |
Ask for a ct....Or get wanded before you walk into the mri at the VA.
I wouldn't be upset at the imaging place. Ingestion of metal will cause a lot of down time on the machine that is making them hundreds of thousands. |
I think the concern is more of damage to the patient.
If the shrapnel were conductive, it may want to take the path of least resistance from where it is to the magnet. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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If I thought I had any ferrous/magnetic material in my body, I'd be very, VERY nervous about getting an MRI. If I was confident that there was NOTHING ferrous/magnetic inside my body, then I wouldn't be worried. A quick google search... https://mriquestions.com/bullets-and-shrapnel.html Quote:
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I worked in the medical imaging field when CT and MRI were being developed and commercialized.
Long time ago... at the beginning. CT and MRI systems do not ingest metal. MRI systems of course employ very powerful magnets. Folks were careful back then, but still there were accidents.... Folks using these things on humans must have policies and procedures and must follow them. I hope your path to better health is fast and hassle-free. |
If it is magnetic it can pull it through you, you probably won't like that.
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Out of curiosity, I watched a couple videos and it doesn’t look as dramatic as it’s made to be in Hollywood (surprised?) I think the concern is that the shrapnel may move around and the imaging center would rather that take place at a hospital where they’re equipped to deal with any problems. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
The last CT scan that I had was one with the contrast.
Had to drink 2 pints of the flavored milk-shake like contrast just before the scan in the morning. I thought my stomach was going to burst. Also had an MRI the next day...that was super easy. |
This is very much to prevent the MRI from causing further harm.
My dad was a machinist (among other things). He has had metal in his eye multiple times. I am absolutely certain that the metal in his eye resulted in his retina becoming detached in an MRI that he had done in Thailand. |
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Here's a weighted(with steel) cavity plug after a mri. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1691452563.jpg |
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Why don't they question tooth crowns/fillings before an MRI?
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Gold wouldn't be attracted to a magnet?
I don't have any gold teeth...but I would ask if I did. I have a titanium rod in my femur and asked. They said...no problem. |
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What's REALLY whacky is that with a big enough magnet, you can float stuff that you wouldn't think was magnetic. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FOYV_E5XwAEhg8u.jpg Here's a floating drop of water that is floated using only a magnet. https://www.ru.nl/publish/pages/682806/water-klein.jpg This was done in 1997. https://www.science.org/content/article/floating-frogs Quote:
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<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/KlJsVqc0ywM?start=32" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" allowfullscreen></iframe>
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^^^ cool stuff.
Before my mri...friends told me it was agonizing because of the sound and the close enclosure. They gave me a set of headphones and I slept through most of it. |
Thanks for all of the explanations! I’ll see what the hospital has to say. I guess I should ask about the screws and plates in my neck while I am at it. The white dots by my eye socket, and down by my jaw are two of those pesky shotgun pellets.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1691455051.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1691455051.jpg |
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