New deaths, illness following heparin use spark FDA investigation

May 13th, 2009 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

The Food and Drug Administration () is testing batches of the heparin after two people died and one became ill after receiving doses of the heparin, according to the Wall Street Journal.

All three incidences occurred at the Beebe Medical Center in Lewes, Delaware, and all three were given supplied by Baxter, the same drug company at the center of last year’s contaminated heparin scandal. That , which killed more than 80 people and injured hundreds more, was manufactured in . The latest batch was manufactured in Ohio.

The in question involves premixed intravenous bags of whereas the previous , which was later found to have been contaminated with a -mimicing substance called over-sulfated chondroitin sulfate (OSCS), involved vials of the medicine and drug-coated medical devices.

The symptoms suffered from the newest victims involved intracranial bleeding; the previous deaths and illnesses were caused by severely low blood pressure. Immediately following the adverse reactions, the hospital contacted Baxter, which immediately contacted the .

Both Baxter and the sent medical teams to Delaware and the took samples of the for testing. “As far as we can determine at this point, it appears to be an isolated incident,” says spokewoman Karen Riley.

Baxter has tested for but not found the contaminant OSCS to be in the batches of taken from Beebe Medical Center. Baxter insists the used on the patients who became ill at Beebe was not manufactured in but in North America.

  • trudy2
    my sister went in the hospital for breathing problems and was told that her vitals were fine for the three weeks she was in there, and all of the sudden she was given heprin and she died, of kindey failure,
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