Magnetix was a magnetic construction toy consisting of a combination of plastic building pieces containing embedded neodymium magnets, and steel bearing balls which can be connected together to form various geometric shapes and structures. Designed to be a cheaper version of the Geomag magnetic construction set, Magnetix' image suffered severely when an early manufacturing defect caused a death, and was subsequently sold under several different brands after the defect was corrected.
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According to TD Monthly, a trade magazine for the toy industry, Magnetix sets are among the top 10 most-wanted building sets, and are top sellers on web sites including Amazon.com, KBToys.com, and Walmart.com.[1]
On March 31, 2006, the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) ordered a recall of all Magnetix brand magnetic building sets. The official CPSC recall notice[2] was issued after one death of a small child and four serious injuries requiring surgery. "Consumers should stop using recalled products immediately unless otherwise instructed," according to the recall notice. Other brands of magnetic builders, such as Geomag were not recalled.
On April 19, 2007, the CPSC ordered further Magnetix recalls, recalling over 4 million sets. To date, CPSC and Mega Brands are aware of one death, one aspiration and 27 intestinal injuries. Emergency surgical intervention was needed in all but one case. At least 1,500 incidents of magnets separating from the building pieces have been reported. ... If a child swallows more than one tiny powerful magnet detached from the plastic building pieces or one such magnet and a metallic object, the objects can attract to each other inside the intestines and cause perforations and/or blockage, which can be fatal, if not treated immediately. The poor quality of these sets was improved in later ones not subject to the recall. [3]
The leading American expert in the area of the effects of swallowed magnets on the human body is radiologist Dr. Alan Oestreich.[4] As early as 2004 he warned the medical community about the dangers of "multiple magnet ingestion",[5] but the case studies never made it into the popular press. A pediatric gastroenterologist, Dr. Marsha Kay[6] of the Cleveland Clinic, is one of the first to write an article for health consumers on steps to take if a child is suspected of swallowing a magnet.[7]