Surgical Kit Sterile-Kits containing the Devon Light Glove Catalog Numbers/Description: 573326 ...

FDA Device Recall #Z-2112-2015 — Class II — April 16, 2015

Recall Summary

Recall Number Z-2112-2015
Classification Class II — Moderate risk
Date Initiated April 16, 2015
Status Terminated
Voluntary Voluntary: Firm initiated

Recalling Firm

Firm Covidien LLC
Location North Haven, CT
Product Type Devices
Quantity 114,813 kits

Product Description

Surgical Kit Sterile-Kits containing the Devon Light Glove Catalog Numbers/Description: 573326 7497-HLS Surgical Kit 573328 7437-NRF SURGICAL ASC KIT 573343 7499-88 SURGICAL KIT with Light Gloves 573346 7499-TLG Surgical Kit with Edge 573359 7499-HLW Surgical KIT 573368 7494-CAB2 SURGICAL KIT 573776 7520-BHP SURGICAL KIT 573777 7527-BHB SURGICAL KITS 573798 7496-8KB Surgical KIT 31144507 7519 Minor Surgical Kit 31175089 7497-8T6 Surgical Kit 31321097 7697 Surgical Set Up Kit 31451480 7493-SFW SURGICAL KIT 31460432 7596-SHH Surgical KIT 50000947 7413-CAD Surgical KIT 50001029 7417-PCP Surgical KIT 50001052 7427-CFS Surgical KIT

Reason for Recall

Devon Light Gloves contain splits or holes compromising the sterility

Distribution Pattern

Worldwide Distribution-US (nationwide) including the Virgin Islands and the countries of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Costa Rica, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland , France, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden, Ireland, ISRAEL,Spain, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Kuwait, United Kingdom, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, South Africa, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Turkey, and UAE.

Lot / Code Information

Lot number begins 508xxxx or lower

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Frequently Asked Questions

Sterility recalls for medical devices vary in severity. If you have already had a procedure using a potentially non-sterile device, contact your healthcare provider immediately — you may need monitoring for signs of infection. Symptoms to watch for include fever, redness or swelling at the surgical site, unusual pain, or discharge. For devices that have not yet been used, they should be quarantined and returned to the manufacturer per the recall notice. Non-sterile implants can cause serious infections; early detection and treatment are critical.

Class I recalls indicate a reasonable probability of serious adverse health consequences or death from the defect. Class II recalls involve products that may cause temporary or medically reversible adverse health consequences, or where serious consequences are remote. Class III recalls cover products not likely to cause any adverse health consequences, typically involving technical regulatory violations. The classification guides urgency — Class I recalls require immediate action, while Class III may simply involve returning a product or acknowledging a labeling change. Always read the specific recall notice for recommended patient actions.

Report problems with medical devices to the FDA through MedWatch at 1-800-FDA-1088 or online at FDA.gov/safety/medwatch. Healthcare facilities are required by law to report device-related serious injuries and deaths. Patients and consumers can also report voluntarily. Include the device name, manufacturer, model number, and a description of the problem and any patient outcome. Reports from patients and clinicians help the FDA identify emerging safety signals and may trigger investigations that lead to recalls of dangerous devices.

What Should You Do?

Stop using this device if you are affected by this recall. Contact your healthcare provider and the manufacturer immediately for guidance. Report adverse events to FDA MedWatch.