Jacksonville Hydroxycut Recall Lawyer
Hydroxycut Liver Transplant Surgery
Hydroxycut was abruptly recalled and taken off the market in early May when the FDA pointed to the weight loss drug’s role in liver damage and failure, which has warranted liver transplant surgery in up to 23 patients thus far. What is liver transplant surgery, and how might Hydroxycut cause the liver failure that leads to such surgery? Read on for more information and a discussion of your legal rights.
Liver transplant surgery is a procedure that takes place when the liver has been irreparably damaged due to chronic liver problems or acute liver problems such as those experienced with Hydroxycut. At any given time, there are up to 17,000 Americans waiting in line for a liver transplant in a kind of race against time. Once the liver fails completely, the body is unable to complete vital digestive and metabolic processes, leading to additional complications and ultimately death.
Liver transplant surgery can occur with a liver from a deceased donor or a partial liver from a living patient; however, the type of donation and surgery depends on the damage sustained by the liver in question. Eligibility for liver transplants is determined through a complex scoring process that rates a patient’s condition and probability of death if they do not receive a transplant. Though hepatitis and cirrhosis are the two most common reasons for liver transplant, the FDA has pointed to liver failure due to Hydroxycut as another reason a patient might need liver transplant surgery.
Clearly liver transplant surgery is traumatic, expensive, and carries strong emotional and financial costs for the patient, who may see their ability to work and lead a normal life significantly compromised. The FDA has not yet released complete information on the Hydroxycut dangers, but it is known that users of the drug have exposed themselves to extreme liver risk, perhaps due to Hydroxycut’s ephedra-mimicking herbal formulation.
Patients who must undergo liver transplant surgery due to complications from Hydroxycut use do have legal rights. They may sue Iovate, the drug’s manufacturer, for compensation for the expenses, costs, and emotional trauma associated with their injury and subsequent liver transplant surgery. We recommend they do so with the help of an experienced attorney such as the ones employed by Farah & Farah, one of the country’s most respected and effective Jacksonville personal injury law firms. Have you been told you need liver transplant surgery due to Hydroxycut complications? Don’t delay – get a legal consultation today. Contact us immediately for your free, confidential case evaluation.
