Press release today: The tracheotomy tubes r
ecalled are Shiley TracheoSoft XLT Extended Length
tracheostomy tubes. These are not the most common
tracheotomy tubes used at home or hospital.
 
More than 73,000 were shipped to hospitals and other health organizations
in the last four years. 

Copied below is the Associated Press release today.


Edward Anthony Oppenheimer, MD, FCCP
Pulmonary Medicine
Los Angeles, California
Email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Friday, Aug. 6, 2004  --  Health
Tracheotomy Tubes Recalled After Deaths
 

WASHINGTON (AP) - A brand of tracheotomy tubes is being
recalled
because it can break apart in the neck - a defect linked to two
deaths that prompted federal health officials Friday to urge that
patients get prompt replacements.

Recalled are Shiley TracheoSoft XLT Extended Length tracheostomy
tubes. More than 73,000 were shipped to hospitals and other health
organizations in the last four years.

There are 17 reports of part of that tubing breaking in a way
that could let it slide down into the neck and block breathing,
said Food and Drug Administration officials. Two of the reports
involved patient deaths, and a third an injury.

Maker Nellcor/Tyco Healthcare says 80 percent of health
organizations that bought the tubing have responded since it
notified them of the recall on July 8. The recall was made public
Friday.

The FDA said there's no way to know how many of the recalled
tubes currently are implanted into patients or - because the
disposable tubing is supposed to be replaced monthly - are being
stored in their homes.

Patients or their families should call their doctors to see if
they use the recalled brand, or check any home supplies, said FDA
compliance officer Christy Foreman.

``We are recommending as soon as practical they find an
alternative,'' she said. 
``It's urgent, because you can't predict'' which tubes may break.

The tubing can be used on patients hooked to ventilators, in
which case an alarm is supposed to sound if breathing is blocked.
But tracheotomy recipients aren't necessarily hospitalized or even
bed-bound, and quick action is required to restore breathing if the
tubing breaks, Foreman said.

This is not standard tracheotomy tubing but a brand specially
designed for certain patients who need a longer-than-usual version.
Other extended-length brands are available, the FDA said.

The defect's cause hasn't been determined, and the recall covers
all lots of that brand.

Doctors or patients with questions may contact the manufacturer
at 1-800-635-5267, extension 3, 
9 a.m. to 7 p.m. weekdays.

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