The FDA reported several class I recalls in the first week of September 2024, a list that includes products such as Medtronic plc’s McGrath line of laryngoscopes, some of which should be jettisoned.
The U.S. FDA recently announced that Inari Medical Inc. issued a recall that corrects the instructions for use for roughly 2,500 units of the Clottriever XL catheter due to reports of device entrapment in the lung.
Minneapolis-based Smiths Medical Inc., recalled two entries in the company’s CADD-Solis line of ambulatory infusion pumps due to problems with the preloaded software.
A dongle is not the sort of thing one typically associates with a medical device, but a charging dongle used with the Baxter Healthcare Life2000 ventilator has triggered a recall of both the dongle and the ventilator.
In an action two years in the making, Dublin-based Medtronic plc withdrew a series of endotracheal tubes because of complaints of lost functionality that carries the risk of respiratory and/or cardiac arrest.
It appears that the expression no news is good news is especially applicable to intra-aortic balloon pumps (IABPs), thus the class I recall of Arrow International devices was bad news for patients.
Dublin-based Medtronic plc. has issued an urgent device correction letter to customers using the company’s Stealthstation robotic surgical system due to a software error that may provide inaccurate information about the location of the system’s surgical tip in the cranial anatomy.
Vyaire Medical Inc., of Mettawa, Ill., reported a class I recall of its Twin Tubes devices, which are used in the collection of air samples during cardiopulmonary exercise testing. The recall was prompted by the risk that the device nozzle will separate during patient use and potentially result in choking, although the FDA said there have been no reports of adverse events in connection with the problem.
Abbott Laboratories announced a class I recall of the Heartmate 3 left ventricular assist system (LVAS) that affects nearly 890 units distributed over the past three years, a move triggered by reports of blood leakage or air entry into the device during implant procedures.
Route 92 Medical Inc., of San Mateo, Calif., reported a class I recall of nearly 1,000 microcatheters because of reports of separation of the distal tip of the catheter, which is associated with two injuries and one reported death. The company indicated that the problematic catheters had been manufactured by an unidentified contract supplier, once again highlightingthe hazards of a failure to properly oversee the contract manufacture of critical medical devices.