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IVC Filter Lawsuits

IVC Filters Can Help Save The Lives Of Young People That Experience Multiple Sudden Blood Clots

Bard IVC Filter Lawsuits

The IVC filter may be indispensable when used as a temporary life-saving blood clot trapping device

Wednesday, December 1, 2021 - Patients that have had a pulmonary embolism can be treated with a medical device called an inferior vena cave IVC filter. An IVC filter is a metal, spider-like device that is snaked into place within the inferior vena cave through a catheter using minimally invasive surgery. Once in place, the IVC filter is expanded to trap blood clots before they can leave the artery. An IVC filter is a temporary medical device that must be removed in a week or two after it has served its purpose during a patient's most critical time. Bard IVC filter lawsuits have been filed that allege the Bard IVC filter suffers from an inherent design defect where the device can break apart within the patient and create life-threatening IVC filter complications. The IVC filter is used along with blood thinner drugs. An IVC filter can be a life-saving medical device if removed promptly, but it also can become life-threatening itself if it is left in place too long. Patients report that the Bard IVC filter has tilted and broken apart within their artery leaving many pieces to travel with the flow of the blood and become lodged in the heart or lungs where surgery to remove them is too risky to attempt.

Patients that are at risk for blood clotting are also treated by wearing compression stockings. The mortality rate for cases of pulmonary embolism is approximately 30%, but that number goes down when the condition is diagnosed and treated early. Pulmonary embolism can occur at any age. UAB tells readers of the case of a young woman who developed a life-threatening pulmonary embolism that was complicated by other factors that eventually led to having to have a leg amputated. On July 12, 2020, 29-year old Amanda Pullen-Hendrix had what she at first believed was an asthma attack that turned out to be a life-threatening stroke and multiple blood clots," according to UAB.

Life-threatening blockages to the arteries that lead to the heart and brain are well known. About 800000 Americans have heart attacks each year, according to the CDC with a fatality rate of around 10%. Americans and others experience blood clots in the artery that leads to the heart and experience heart attacks. When the blockage is in the artery that leads to the brain the result is a stroke. A third and frequent type of blockage can happen in the artery that leads to the lungs causing what is called a pulmonary embolism. According to the University of Alabama News, about 100,000 Americans die each year from pulmonary embolism and hospitals have specialized staff and equipment to handle such situations. A patient with a pulmonary embolism may experience shortness of breath, chest pain, facial paralysis, slurred speech, and overall body weakness. A pulmonary embolism is often accompanied by clots to the brain and the heart. Blood clots can travel from the large artery in the leg.

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OnderLaw, LLC is a St. Louis personal injury law firm handling serious injury and death claims across the country. Its mission is the pursuit of justice, no matter how complex the case or strenuous the effort. The Onder Law Firm has represented clients throughout the United States in pharmaceutical and medical device litigation such as Pradaxa, Lexapro and Yasmin/Yaz, where the firm's attorneys held significant leadership roles in the litigation, as well as Actos, DePuy, Risperdal and others, and other law firms throughout the nation often seek its experience and expertise on complex litigation.