Sunday, January 22, 2012

Zoloft Lawsuit Over Life-Threatening PPHN


Zoloft is one of the more commonly used medications in the United States, as it is approved to treat a number of relatively common psychological disorders including depression and anxiety. A number of women turned to Zoloft for relief from depression and anxiety symptoms during pregnancy, which can be triggered by an increase or fluctuation in hormones. Some of these women found out too late that Zoloft can have a serious impact on the health of an unborn child, especially when it is taken in the first trimester of pregnancy. One of the most dangerous Zoloft birth defect side effects is the possibility of an unborn child developing Zoloft persistent pulmonary hypertension.

A number of families whose children were born with Zoloft birth defects have decided to take legal action, hiring a Zoloft lawyer and filing lawsuits in order to gain damages that can hopefully cover medical bills and other costs. Birth defects are especially serious because they could impact the child as he or she grows up, causing him or her to have medical bills that accumulate throughout a lifetime, depending on the severity and duration of the birth defect. Some Zoloft birth defects have even proven fatal.
Persistent pulmonary hypertension, also referred to as PPHN, is a circulatory disorder in which an infant's lungs cannot get a proper blood supply, which can lead to heart failure, shock, brain hemorrhage, seizures, kidney failure, hardening of the lungs, organ damage, breathing problems, developmental and neurological delays, hearing problems, and death. 
Zoloft has also been linked to other birth defects, including holes in the heart, defects of the abdominal wall, problems related to brain growth or skull growth, cleft palate, and malformation of the anus. These can range from mild and easily corrected or easy to live with to severe and permanently disabling.
Parents who have filed Zoloft lawsuits after reaching out to a qualified Zoloft lawyer are centering their lawsuits in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas, which houses the nation's first Complex Litigation Center devoted to mass tort actions. Eight Zoloft-related lawsuits have been filed by a Zoloft lawyer in Michigan.

No comments:

Post a Comment