This is where we discover that her feathers have anti magnetic properties, block the MRI, and they have to either pluck her or figure out another way to check her out. Awkward.
I didn't say metallic, I said Anti-Magnetic. As in a material that blocks, interferes with, or nullifies magnetic fields. Anti-Magnetic materials don't get yanked by magnets. Think of it like wearing a lead apron while getting an X-ray.
The thing many people get wrong about MRI machines is, that the magnets are ALWAYS on. It is just that when they rotate that they go into scanner mode. So if the feathers would be magnetic, they'd be plucked out the instant they get close enough to the MRI room.
I didn't say metallic, I said Anti-Magnetic. As in a material that blocks, interferes with, or nullifies magnetic fields. Anti-Magnetic materials don't get yanked by magnets. Think of it like wearing a lead apron while getting an X-ray.
Might take a little longer but need on the newer 'wide' open MRI machines. NEVER thought I was claustrophobic till I had to get an MRI for the second time
It's not just how closed in it is? It's the HUFF-TSCHEE HUFF-TSCHEE HUFF-TSCHEE and the BANG BANG BANG BANG, followed by the all-over tingly feeling you start to get towards the end.
This brings up interesting questions about how medical devices might need to be re-designed and modified in a world where patients can be shaped like taurs, or have wings, or any number of other variations
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