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IVC Filter Lawsuits

The Food And Drug Administration Has Been Warning Surgeons About The IVC Filters Design Flaws For More Than A decade

Bard IVC Filter Lawsuits

The IVC filter should have been recalled years ago if anyone was listening to the complaints being made to the FDA

Thursday, October 28, 2021 - Medical devices that have been FDA-approved based on the fast-track 501 k process need to be monitored for complaints made by surgeons and patients. Surgeons then need to comply with FDA guidelines rather than continue implanting medical devices that are inherently defective. Bard IVC filter complications have led patients to file lawsuits against Bard and other makers of IVC filters. The FDA has repeatedly, beginning in 2010, urged surgeons to remove IVC filters that have been implanted in patients as soon as the risk of blood clots has passed due to the deadly nature of complications the ill-conceived medical device can cause. The website Endovascular Today.com (EVT) reports that the Food and Drug Administration has been concerned about the high number of reports of complications that can occur if the IVC filter is left in place too long. EVT writes, "the FDA has received reports of adverse events and problems associated with IVC filter devices. The reports include device migration, filter fracture, embolization (movement of the entire filter or fracture fragments to the heart or lungs), perforation of the IVC, and difficulty removing the device. Some of these events led to adverse clinical outcomes. These types of events may be related to how long the filter has been implanted."

Bard IVC filter lawyers are learning about the potential design flaw of the IVC filter. The device intentionally irritates the inner lining of the inferior vena cava and elicits the body's natural response to create scar tissue to keep the filter in place. The longer the filter remains in the artery, the more scar tissue develops and the more difficult it is to remove it. IVC filters that have become embedded in the arterial wall by scar tissue may require life-threatening open surgery to repair. Some patients report pain when the IVC filter tilts and penetrated the IVC wall, causing bleeding and even more scar tissue build-up. The body also will tend to attack the IVC filter considering it is a foreign object, and infections can occur. Most surgeons would rather delay the surgery and continue to monitor the patient. As blood clots become trapped in the IVC filters spider-like tentacles the more likely one is to break free and cause the problem the device was trying to solve. The IVC filter can also migrate through the artery to the heart or lungs depending on where it was placed and cause lacerations, infections, and other complications. When a surgeon uses force to try and pull the IVC filter out of an artery the filter can break apart propelling deadly shards of metal into the heart and lungs. The best way surgeons determine where the fragments of the fractured IVC filter are is to ask the patient where the pain is and to perform exploratory surgery. Doctors in the future may use lasers to help them excise the tissue in the artery to remove the device. According to Helio.com, "Royal Philips announced the FDA has granted breakthrough device designation for its laser-assisted inferior vena cava filter removal device. According to a company press release, the device is intended for ablating tissue to remove an IVC filter when previous attempts at removal failed."

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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.