A young woman’s new breast implants were so irresistible to two female Rikers guards that they pulled her off the visitation line for an up-close examination, she charges in new court papers.

Jeanette Reynoso says the jailers ordered her to strip naked during a recent visit to see her husband — and it wasn’t because they were looking for contraband.

“I don’t know why this was happening. Then I realized they wanted to see my body,” Reynoso told The Post.

“I got operated on in May; I got a liposuction and breast implants,” she added.

“I knew they wanted to see what was under my clothes because, at the end of the process, they had the nerve to ask me who operated on me, how much my operation cost and whether it hurt.”

Reynoso, 26, had been going to Rikers three times a week since her husband, Lewis Espinal, was locked up on multiple charges, including reckless endangerment.

He is charged with striking a pedestrian with his Mercedes while fleeing cops on the Upper West Side in July.

Reynoso says that on prior visits, she had never been subjected to more than a pat-down and being asked to walk through a metal detector.

But when she showed up to the George Motchan Detention Center on Oct. 2, the guard who normally screened her was not there, leaving her in the hands of two guards who just couldn’t help but cop a feel, court papers allege.

After passing through two metal detectors, Reynoso was taken into a visitors search room, where the two women ordered her to strip and subjected her to an “extreme full-body cavity search,” papers allege.

When Reynoso protested, the two guards threatened to take away her visitation privileges for 45 days, she claims.

Reynoso says she was forced to stand naked and crying, with her hands against the wall, as one of the women performed the intrusive search.

The two guards then took turns squeezing her breasts and grilling her about her recent surgery, she alleges.

“I had my hands on the wall and they were touching my breasts, shaking them,” Reynoso said. “They were curious about my body.”

The court papers filed by the Bronx mother of two adds, “As claimant sat there crying, she was questioned by the officers in regard to her recent cosmetic surgery.”

The $10 million notice of claim against the city was filed Thursday by Reynoso’s attorney, Alan Figman, who said his client suffered post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.

The Department of Correction does not permit strip searches of visitors and only allows pat downs with a person’s signed consent.

“While we do not comment on pending litigation, DOC has a zero tolerance policy with regard to the mistreatment of visitors,” said a DOC spokesman.