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25th July 2018
04:59pm BST

At first, his mother thought that they were the little balls used for decorating cakes but the doctor informed her that they were, in fact, metal. Noah had eaten them separately and they had come together again in his stomach.
Noah was in surgery for six hours while the doctors removed the magnets and repaired the damage they had done.
Dr Maurizio Pacilli said:
"I must confess, I've never seen a kid swallowing 30 magnets. "They travel along inside the intestine and they are attracted to each other so they're trying to get together. And by doing this, they can actually create little holes inside the guts. "We found about ten or twelve holes, which then we had to fix and stitch one at a time, and also we had to remove parts of the intestine."https://twitter.com/7NewsMelbourne/status/1021308734008582144?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1021308734008582144&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.longroom.com%2Fdiscussion%2F1113805%2Fmelbourne-boy-swallowed-30-fridge-magnets-and-it-took-surgeons-six-hours-to-remove-them Noah's father, Fiso, expressed his shock at how something so small could do so much damage. Noah is luckily back on his feet now but doctors have reportedly seen an increase in the number of children swallowing magnets. Experts urge parents to be cautious about magnets and toys that include magnets.