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Stethoscopes
Recalled
Abnormal right lower lung sounds heard in all patients
CLEVELAND,
OH--Littman Medical Technologies today announced the recall of thousands
of its Cardiology III stethoscopes, amid mounting evidence suggesting
that their use results in the auscultation of coarse, tubular breath sounds
with fine crackles at the right base of all patients.
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Faulty
stethoscope, one of thousands recalled
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The problem
was first identified at St. Albans Medical Center in Cleveland, OH, where
the diagnosis of right lower lobe pneumonia quintupled during a recent
four-month period. Antibiotic usage there surged correspondingly, prompting
a state-mandated investigation.
Clinicians
and authorities eventually traced the problem to the stethoscopes, which
had been donated several months prior by Roche Pharmaceuticals.
"I was
seeing a patient who'd just had a right pneumonectomy, and she had coarse,
tubular breath sounds with fine crackles at the right base," said
pulmonologist Dr. Herb Peters.
"So
I put my ear on her back," he continued, "and... and, nothin'!
Her right base was as quiescent as a stagnant lilly pond on a densely
humid August afternoon!"
"Without
the frogs, of course," he quickly adds.
Some hospital
officials suspect the stethoscopes may have been altered by Roche, so
as to augment clinical findings consistent with pneumonia.
"[In]
the same box the scopes came in, there were like twenty samples of Biaxin,"
says an administrator, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "Just
a co-inky dink? I'd say not!"
Biaxin (clarithromycin)
was approved by the FDA in 1997 for the treatment of coarse, tubular breath
sounds with fine crackles at the right base.
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