It was reported that during a da vinci-assisted cholecystectomy surgical procedure, the large hem-o-lock clip applier wrist was turning without the surgeon navigating it, also the white disc was popping out.The procedure was completed with no reported injury.Intuitive surgical, inc.(isi) followed up with the initial reporter and obtained the following additional information: the reporter clarified that by "white disc", they meant the input disc on housing end that is responsible for manipulation the instrument.There were no issues noted prior to use.The customer removed the instrument and completed the procedure using a spare.There was no report of patient injury.No further details/ information available.
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The large hem-o-lock clip applier instrument has been returned and evaluated by the failure analysis team.Failure analysis investigations replicated/confirmed the customer reported complaint.Failure analysis found the primary failure of broken input disks to be related to the customer reported complaint.The instrument was found to have multiple input disks both broken and cracked.Input disk #7 was found completely detached from the base of the housing.The broken input disk was not returned with the instrument.Hairline cracks were found on grip input shaft #6.The root cause for the broken input disks is attributed to the misuse, most commonly caused by improper cleaning/ reprocessing techniques.No cables showed any signs of fraying or breakage.This can result in the cable becoming loose or derailed on the distal end and cause non-intuitive motion.The instrument will not be able to engage properly with the sterile adapter on the in-house system.The root cause for the corroded bearings is attributed to the mishandling, most commonly caused by improper cleaning/reprocessing techniques.A review of the site's complaint history does not show any additional complaints related to this product or this event.No image or procedure video was provided for review.A review of the instrument log for the large clip applier instrument (470230-12/n11210518) associated with this event has been performed.Per the logs, the instrument was last used on (b)(6) 2021.This complaint is being reported based on the following conclusion: it was alleged that the large clip applier moved freely with uncontrolled motions with no evidence or claim of user mishandling or misuse.Poor instrument control could result in unintuitive motion and subsequent tissue damage.While there was no harm or injury to the patient, the reported failure mode could likely cause or contribute to an adverse event if it were to recur.Follow-up was attempted, but the missing patient information was either unknown, unavailable, not provided, or not applicable.The expiration date is not applicable.The product is not implantable.It is unknown if the initial reporter submitted a report to the fda.
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