On-duty nurse, Nurse Winter, is performing quick checkups on patient Frank's sensitive little body. As she observes her patient's knees, she proceeds to conduct a thorough physical examination. Gently, she runs her hands along his ankles, down to his feet, checking for any signs of tenderness in his legs. Frank squirms and his legs flail as soon as her fingers touch his leg skin. He is quite sensitive when it comes to his feet, even the gentlest touch can elicit a reaction. Frank's body squirms with sensitivity as the nurse rubs and checks the back of his ankles down to the soles of his feet. He kicks and flails abruptly, unable to hide his squirminess. After lightly tickling and checking his bottom, the nurse proceeds to use her stethoscope to check his heartbeat. She gently positions the chest-piece diaphragm on Frank's small, slender upper left chest, carefully attempting to assess his heartbeat. It's fairly typical until he begins squirming once more, tickled by the touch of the stethoscope as it's pushed against his chest. Nurse Winter finds his unique body sensitivity condition fascinating and believes it warrants a tickle treatment. Nurse Winter deviously applies light tickles and soft squishes to her patient's body, carefully assessing his sensitivity levels. However, performing a thorough 'hand checkup' proves challenging as he is constantly moving, with his arms and legs flailing and his body squirming. His laughter grows more intense, indicating a high level of sensitivity that may reach its peak soon. Inhaling deeply, he braces himself for another round of tickles from the playful nurse, determined to prove just how ridiculously sensitive he is. Every inch of his body seems to have a personal vendetta against her, reacting to the tickles with gusto. Sprawled out on the patient bed, wriggling like a fish out of water, Frank is desperately battling the ticklish torment caused by the nurse's wiggly fingers. Nurse Winter's skilled hands expertly scrunch and curl, delivering intense tickles to Frank. In a final attempt to assess her patient's body, she'll give his heart rate another peek, and confirm that tickling is surprisingly good for him (medically speaking), but warn that if left unchecked, it could unleash a wild wave of hypersensitivity.
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