Victims of defective shoulder pain pump injuries in North Dakota or elsewhere in many cases have no other choice but to undergo shoulder replacement surgery. Otherwise, they may endure steady pain. However patients should not bear the costs, pain and hardship by themselves. On the contrary, the manufacturer that's accountable for their suffering must pay for their ordeal. That will require acquiring an experienced North Dakota shoulder pain pump injury lawyer.
Rather than helping a shoulder surgery patient in North Dakota or in another state, some shoulder pain pumps ostensibly made to render aid instead inflict severe agony due to irreversible cartilage destruction. Sufferers then are beset by excruciating agony and in many cases are incapable of sitting or standing without pain. These sufferers should be compensated economically for their medical costs, for lost salary from missed days of employment and for their suffering and pain. These sufferers' debilitating pain must be rectified, and the economic means for doing so may necessitate engaging a knowledgeable North Dakota shoulder pain pump attorney.
Sufferers of defective shoulder pain pump agony in North Dakota and elsewhere in this country have a legal option through a shoulder pain pump lawsuit versus the manufacturers which are to blame for their injury. To this date, such shoulder pain pump litigation actions have been aimed at I-Flow Corp. and Stryker Corp., which manufacture the devices, along with the creators of the anesthetics bupivacaine and epinephrine applied in the devices. People injured by a shoulder pain pump argue that these manufacturers were remiss in making vital safety studies, and moreover did not notify physicians about the hazard of using a shoulder pain pump incorrectly.
People in North Dakota and throughout the United States are being injured by defective shoulder pain pump devices due to the fact that some manufacturers of such medical devices have improperly advised doctors on how to use the device. If a shoulder pain pump catheter is inserted directly into the shoulder joint upon arthroscopic shoulder surgery, the device can provoke a painful malady named postarthroscopic glenhumeral chondrolysis, or PAGCL. This injury produces deteriorated cartilage and causes agonizing pain in the victim.
DISCLAIMER: Jim S. Adler & Associates is not licensed in North Dakota. However, the law firm works with outside attorneys and local lawyers to litigate claims for North Dakota as needed.
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