Fidget spinners beware.

An 11-year-old Arizona boy was admitted to two different hospitals over the course of 16 hours after getting a three-pointed fidget spinner

shaped like a ninja star stuck on his finger, according to a report.

“I thought that maybe it would be on there for the rest of my life,” the kid victim, Sam Rhodes, told 12 News KPNX-TV.

Sam was playing with a Genji Shuriken-style fidget spinner, inspired by a video game, when the toy became stuck on his finger.

Unlike the common fidget spinners, which have taken youngsters storm, the Genji Shuriken-style, metal-alloy spinner is placed on a user’s finger.

“I barely pushed on my finger and it just popped right on,” Sam said.

The boy’s mother, Cassie Rhodes, desperately tried to get the spinner off her son’s finger.

“We tried soap, we tried oil, we tried looking on the internet for tricks,” Cassie said, according to the news outlet.

When all else failed, Cassie took her son to the emergency room where doctors tried using a ring cutter to get the spinner off Sam to no avail.

“I mean, it didn’t even make a mark. They [hospital staff] said, ‘We don’t have the equipment right now at this point to help you, but we’ll find someone who does,’” Cassie told the news channel.

Sam and his mom were eventually transferred for another area hospital, where nurses said Sam was the third patient to get a similar fidget spinner stuck on his finger.

Finally, a maintenance worker at the hospital, Greg Earhart, was able to cut the spinner off Sam using a fiberglass saw and four different blades before it finally came off.

“I was extremely happy because I knew it was finally over,” said Sam.

The Rhodes family said they hope their story serves as a warning to other people who use the same kind of fidget spinner.