Pain pump manufacturer enjoys gains despite mounting lawsuits
May 11th, 2009 by Jennifer Walker-Journey
Postoperative pain delivery system developer and marketer I-Flow Corporation may be facing lawsuits for needlessly injuring patients by instructing physicians to use their products incorrectly, but the company doesn’t seem to be suffering. The company recently announced that total revenue for the first quarter of 2009 has skyrocketed by 9 percent over the first quarter of 2008 – an increase of about $2.5 million, according to OC Metro.
The company’s Regional Anesthesia sales, which includes the company’s flagship On-Q product lines, also increased 9 percent during the same quarter, according to the report.
There are approximately 140 lawsuits against manufacturers of pain pumps, including I-Flow Corporation, currently pending in state and federal courts throughout the country, says Frank Woodson, shareholder with Beasley Allen Law Firm. That number has jumped considerably since the summer of 2008, as more and more evidence began to link pain pumps to a serious and debilitating shoulder injury known as chondrolysis.
Pain pumps are commonly used by surgeons when performing shoulder surgeries. The pump, which sits outside the body but is attached to a catheter that is implanted into the surgical site, delivers medication for up to 72 hours. Once all the medication has been injected, the catheter is gently pulled out by the patient.
Pain pump manufacturers were given Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval to market the devices with the catheter in the shoulder tissue. In early 2000, manufacturers sought to have FDA approval to put the catheters directly into the shoulder joint but the FDA rejected the request. However, pain pump manufacturers went ahead and instructed physicians to implant the catheter in the shoulder joint. The medicine that dripped into the shoulder joint area ate away the cartilage in the shoulder joint causing the painful and debilitating condition known as chondrolysis. There is no cure for the condition and in some cases, more surgery may be required.
Related posts:
- I-Flow pain pump manufacturers face more lawsuits
- Lawsuits seek more than $68 million from pain pump manufacturers
- Women sue pain pump manufacturer for dangerously defective device
- FDA told pain pump manufacturers ‘no,’ but they refused to listen
- More lawsuits filed as link made between pain pumps, chondrolysis
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