Mumbai police confirmed that an Indian man died after being “sucked” into an MRI machine, according to international news agency Agence France-Presse.
The
 victim, 32-year-old Rajesh Maru, was visiting a relative in Mumbai's 
Nair Hospital when he entered a room containing a magnetic resonance 
imaging machine—more commonly known as an MRI machine—while carrying an 
oxygen cylinder. The machine's powerful magnetic force pulled him toward
 it, the police stated according to AFP, 
apparently damaging the 
cylinder and poisoning Maru when he inhaled the pure liquid oxygen it 
contained.
According
 to Maru's uncle, Maru had been carrying the cylinder because a junior 
staff member had asked him to, assuring him that the MRI machine was 
turned off, AFP reported. The MRI pulled the metal cylinder toward it, 
trapping Maru's arm inside and exposing him to the deadly liquid oxygen,
 according to the Hindustan Times. His fingers were severed while hospital employees tried to free him. He died several hours later in intensive care.
“A
 tube of the oxygen cylinder too got disconnected from the cylinder and 
it began leaking. Maru inhaled a huge amount of oxygen due to which he 
fell unconscious,” Savalaram Agavane, senior police inspector of 
Agripada police station, said according to the Hindustan Times. A doctor and staff member have been arrested for causing death due to negligence, according to AFP.
When turned on, as this one was, MRI machines
 emit powerful magnetic fields that image the body's internal 
organs. That field is the reason patients and doctors alike are asked to
 remove any metal they might be carrying—belt buckles, piercings, loose change, keys—before they approach one.
In liquid form, oxygen is pale blue in color and extremely cold, according to the University of Florida's Environmental Health & Safety division.
 Liquid oxygen is a cryogenic fluid, meaning a liquefied gas with a 
boiling point lower than -238 degrees Fahrenheit (-297.3°F, in this 
case). It's so highly combustible that it's used to power rockets.
 In large enough quantities, it's poisonous—Maru's autopsy showed his 
cause of death to be toxic amounts of inhaled liquid oxygen, according 
to the Hindustan Times.
The
 air we breathe under normal circumstances comprises about 21-percent 
oxygen, according to the University of Florida. Pure, highly pressurized
 oxygen, though, is toxic enough to compromise lung function, causing 
convulsions, respiratory distress, loss of vision and, in cases like 
this, death.
 
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