Device product
Medtronic MiniMed 640G Insulin Infusion Pump, Ref#s/Model(s) - MMT-1511, MMT-1711, MMT-1512, MMT-1712, MMT-1751, and MMT-1752 *Not for US Distribution
Z-0958-2020
Product summary
- Firm
- Medtronic Inc.
- Event
- Event 84430
- Status
- Ongoing
- Classification
- Class I
- Quantity
- Unavailable
- Official record key
device-enforcement:Z-0958-2020
Official wording
Reason: There have been reported incidents of a loose reservoir that can no longer be locked into the pump. The reservoir can become loose due to a broken or missing retainer ring that prevents a proper lock. If the reservoir is not properly locked into the pump, it could lead to over or under delivery of insulin, which could then result in hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia.
Code information: All Serial Numbers ( excluding devices with black retainer rings) ***NOT DISTRIBUTED WITHIN THE US***
Distribution pattern: US:AK,AL,AR,AZ,BM,CA,CO,CT,DC,DE,FL,GA,HI,IA,ID,IL,IN,KS,KY,LA,MA,MD,ME,MI,MN,MO,MS,MT,NC,ND,NE,NH, NJ, NM, NV, NY, OH, OK, OR, PA, PR, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, VT, WA, WI, WV, WY OUS: France, Germany, UK, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Israel, Norway, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Czech Republic, Finland, Switzerland, Slovakia, Ireland, Poland, S. Africa, Greece, Hungary, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emira, New Zealand, Australia, Japan, Mexico, Colombia, Brazil, S. East Asia, Korea, Canada,
Derived failure modes
-
Unknown
There have been reported incidents of a loose reservoir that can no longer be locked into the pump. The reservoir can become loose due to a broken or missing retainer ring that prevents a proper lock. If the reservoir is not properly locked into the pump, it could lead to over or under delivery of insulin, which could then result in hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia.