Early Alert: Medical Action Industries Halyard Kit Recall - Angiographic Syringe Risk
Summary
FDA issued an early alert regarding Medical Action Industries convenience kits containing Medline Namic RA syringes subject to a Class I recall. The syringe rotating adaptor on affected devices may unwind during use, resulting in loose connections or full disconnection, with potential for biohazard exposure, blood loss, infection, air embolism, serious injury, or death. As of March 13, four serious injuries have been reported with no deaths. Affected parties must identify, segregate, and quarantine affected product and apply warning labels.
What changed
FDA CDRH issued an Early Alert notifying the public of a potentially high-risk device issue involving Medical Action Industries Halyard Kit - Pack Cath BHH convenience kits (Model BHCA49K) containing Medline Namic RA syringes. Affected lot numbers include 342509, 346066, 338434, 339423, 337365, 335489, 336189, and 336789. The syringes' rotating adaptor may unwind during use, potentially causing biohazard exposure, blood loss, infection, and air embolism leading to serious injury or death.
Healthcare providers and distributors holding affected kits must immediately identify and quarantine inventory, apply FDA-provided warning labels to affected products, and notify any downstream parties who received the product. Per Medline's guidance, if use is unavoidable due to patient harm risk, the syringe must be used with extreme caution including manual stabilization and continuous monitoring throughout procedures. This recall affects clinical settings where angiographic procedures are performed.
What to do next
- Identify, segregate, and quarantine all affected product with affected lot numbers
- Apply warning labels to all affected kits stating affected syringes must be removed and discarded from further use
- Notify downstream distributors or resellers of this recall communication
Archived snapshot
Apr 16, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
CDRH is issuing this Early Alert **to notify the public of a potentially high-risk device issue.* The FDA will keep the public informed and update this web page as significant new information becomes available.*
Affected Product
The FDA is aware that Medical Action Industries has issued a letter to affected customers recommending certain angiographic syringes included in convenience kits be removed from where they are used or sold. Affected devices:
- Device Description: Halyard Kit - Pack Cath BHH 5/Cs BANNER
- Model/Item Number: BHCA49K
- Unique Device Identifier: 0809160490294
- Affected lot numbers: 342509, 346066, 338434, 339423, 337365, 335489, 336189, 336789
What to Do
Identify kits with affected syringes. Apply over-labels to all affected kits on hand stating that the affected syringes must be removed and discarded from further use.
On March 13, Medical Action Industries sent all affected customers. On April 3, a revised notification was sent to affected customers. These notifications recommend the following actions:
- Identify, segregate, and quarantine all affected product.
- Add warning labels to all affected kits stating that the affected syringes must be removed and discarded from further use.
- Use the labeling template provided by Medical Action Industries to print labels. This label should be applied in a prominently visible location to end-users. The location chosen should not cover any other critical product information found on existing product labeling.
- If you are a distributor or have resold or transferred this product, notify them of this recall communication.
- Per Medline, due to the risk of serious injury or death, customers are directed to remove and destroy all Namic RA Syringes. If use is unavoidable because failure to proceed would result in patient harm, the Namic RA syringe must be used with extreme caution and vigilance, including manual stabilization of syringe-to-manifold connections and continuous, 100% monitoring during setup and throughout the entire procedure.
- All usage guidelines and the Instructions for Use are provided in Medline’s recall letter. Strict adherence to all usage guidelines and the Instructions for Use are required. Check this web page for updates. The FDA is currently reviewing information about this potentially high-risk device issue and will keep the public informed as significant new information becomes available.
Reason for Alert
Medical Action Industries initiated an urgent Medical Device Recall notification for Cath Pack convenience kits that contain syringes affected by Medline’s Namic Angiographic Control Syringes with Rotating Adaptor (“Namic RA Syringes”) recall notification.
Medline Industries stated that the syringe rotating adaptor on affected devices may unwind during use, resulting in a loose connection or full disconnection between the syringe and manifold. If unwinding occurs, there is potential for biohazard exposure, blood loss, and infection. Loose connections or disconnections may introduce air into the line, which could result in air embolism. These conditions may lead to serious injury or death. All units have the potential to exhibit this failure mode.
As of March 13, Medline Industries has reported four serious injuries and no deaths associated with this issue.
Device Use
Convenience kits contain various surgical instruments, dressings and/or other materials, and pharmaceutical components that are intended to be used during various surgical procedures.
Contact Information
Customers in the U.S. with adverse reactions, quality problems, or questions about this issue should contact Medical Action Industries at complaints@owens-minor.com.
Additional FDA Resources
- Angiographic Syringe Recall: Medline Industries Removes Namic Angiographic Rotating Adaptor Control Syringes [04/09/2026]
- FDA Enforcement Report for Medline Namic RA Syringes Recall
- CDRH Medical Device Recall Database for Medline Namic RA Syringes Recall
Unique Device Identifier (UDI)
The unique device identifier (UDI) helps identify individual medical devices sold in the United States from distribution to use. The UDI allows for more accurate reporting, reviewing, and analyzing of adverse event reports so that devices can be identified more quickly, and as a result, problems potentially resolved more quickly.
- How do I recognize a UDI on a label?
- AccessGUDID database - Identify Your Medical Device
- Benefits of a UDI System
How do I report a problem?
Health care professionals and consumers may report adverse reactions or quality problems they experienced using these devices to MedWatch: The FDA Safety Information and Adverse Event Reporting Program.
- ## Content current as of:
04/16/2026
Regulated Product(s)
- Medical Devices
Related changes
Get daily alerts for FDA Medical Device Recalls
Daily digest delivered to your inbox.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
Source
About this page
Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission
Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from FDA.
The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when FDA Medical Device Recalls publishes new changes.
Subscribed!
Optional. Filters your digest to exactly the updates that matter to you.