I-Flow pain pump manufacturers face more lawsuits
May 12th, 2009 by Jennifer Walker-Journey
Postoperative pain pump marketer I-Flow Corporation is facing more lawsuits, this time from a pain pump competitor over the package inserts I-Flow distributes about its On-Q pain pump. Zone Medical LLC claims I-Flow is misrepresenting latex exposure risks and putting patients and health care professionals at risk in order to gain commercial advantages.
Zone maintains that the cover of I-Flow’s On-Q pain pump contains holes that allow latex to come in contact with patients and health care professionals. The company contends that individuals who come in contact with the pump and suffer a latex reaction may not be properly treated based on the assumption that the I-Flow product does not pose a latex risk. Zone is the worldwide distributor for the Solace pain pump, which has a latex-free design.
I-Flow may want to take a closer look at patient safety. The company is one of several pain pump manufacturers – a list that also includes Stryker Corporation, DJ Orthopedics Inc., and Breg Inc. – facing lawsuits from plaintiffs that allege the pumps have caused lifelong and painfully debilitating shoulder injury. Lawsuits contend that manufacturers of pain pumps instructed physicians to use the pumps in a manner that was not approved by the FDA for shoulder surgery.
Instead of implanting the catheter of the pain pumps into the shoulder tissue as was FDA approved, surgeons were instructed to place the catheters into the shoulder joint area. Doing so allowed medication to drip into the shoulder joint and essentially eat away the cartilage, causing bone to rub against bone and resulting in a serious, irreversible condition known as chondrolysis.
Source: PR Web

