Lactated Ringer's Injection USP, 1000 mL container, Rx only, B. Braun Medical, Inc., Bethlehem, PA 18018-3524 USA, NDC 0
B BRAUN MEDICAL INC
Presence of Particulate Matter.
Source: FDA Drug Enforcement (openFDA API)
2 urgent recalls — updated every few hours from FDA CDER.
Class I is the FDA's most serious recall classification for medications. It is issued when the agency has determined that using or being exposed to the product will likely cause serious adverse health consequences or death. This classification is not precautionary — it reflects the FDA's assessment that a specific, identified defect creates a real probability of serious harm.
Common reasons for Class I drug recalls include microbial contamination of injectable medications, which can cause sepsis or meningitis if administered; nitrosamine contamination (particularly in blood pressure medications and certain antibiotics), which are probable human carcinogens; sub-potent medications where the active ingredient is missing or severely reduced, leaving patients without treatment; and superpotent medications where the active ingredient is present at a dangerous excess level, creating overdose risk.
Sterile injectable drugs — IV bags, insulin vials, ophthalmic solutions — receive particularly close scrutiny because the consequences of contamination are direct and severe. A non-sterile injectable bypasses the body's normal barriers against infection. Even a small microbial load in an IV drug can cause a life-threatening bloodstream infection.
B BRAUN MEDICAL INC
Presence of Particulate Matter.
Wisconsin Pharmacal Company
Microbial Contamination of Non-Sterile Products: confirmed presence of Staphylococcus Aureus.