Parts: Pump IV
Condition
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Please Note: Search results for this device do not include the following devices, please select the relevant device if it is of interest to you: Infusion Pump,Ambulatory Infusion Pump,Syringe Pump
- Complete Systems (88)
- Parts (10)
Item Details
Seller details
Item Price (USD)
Year manufactured
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Device: Pump IV
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: FRONT CASE / 712-04223-006
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: FRONT CASE / 712-04223-006
Location: United States
Negotiable
-
Quick Look
Device: Pump IV
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: KEY, MODIFIED LC4200 / 713-73576-013
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: KEY, MODIFIED LC4200 / 713-73576-013
Location: United States
Negotiable
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Quick Look
Device: Pump IV
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: RTNR, PWR CORD (RETAINING PLATE) / 714-04006-005
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: RTNR, PWR CORD (RETAINING PLATE) / 714-04006-005
Location: United States
Negotiable
-
Quick Look
Device: Pump IV
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: STRAP, VELCRO HOOK % LOOP, LT GR / 725-36531-003
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: STRAP, VELCRO HOOK % LOOP, LT GR / 725-36531-003
Location: United States
Negotiable
-
Quick Look
Device: Pump IV
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: LCH, HOOK, DOOR / 727-04283-001
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: LCH, HOOK, DOOR / 727-04283-001
Location: United States
Negotiable
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Quick Look
Device: Pump IV
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: GASKET, FRONT DOOR / 765-04079-003
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: GASKET, FRONT DOOR / 765-04079-003
Location: United States
Negotiable
-
Quick Look
Device: Pump IV
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: PANEL, FRONT / 812-04219-006
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: PANEL, FRONT / 812-04219-006
Location: United States
Negotiable
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Quick Look
Device: Pump IV
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: SWITCH, PENDANT ASSY, PCA PUMP / 830-04241-009
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: SWITCH, PENDANT ASSY, PCA PUMP / 830-04241-009
Location: United States
Negotiable
-
Quick Look
Device: Pump IV
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: 840-04095-008
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: 840-04095-008
Location: United States
Negotiable
-
Quick Look
Device: Pump IV
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: ASSEMBLY, DOOR, PCA PLUS 2 / 840-04476-003
Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories
Model: LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II
Name / Number: ASSEMBLY, DOOR, PCA PLUS 2 / 840-04476-003
Location: United States
Negotiable
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The model & manufacturer of the marked items have changed due to an acquisition between companies, and are also known as:
| Current Manufacturer / Model Name | Alternative Manufacturer / Model Name |
|---|---|
| Hospira / LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II | Abbott Laboratories / LIFECARE 4100 PCA PLUS II |
Pump IV may also be referred to as :
Syringe Pump | Infusion Pump, Patient-Controlled Analgesic | PCA Pump | Patient-Controlled Analgesia Unit | Pain Control Syringe Pump | Pain Control Infusion Pump | Intrathecal Analgesia Unit | Infusion Pump, Demand Analgesia | Epidural Analgesia Unit | Analgesia Unit, Intravenous | Patient-Controlled Analgesic PumpTips for buying Pump IV Parts
- The dose button on the IV pumps should be easily accessible and located on the bolus cord or pump. The patient should easily activate the dose button, and a recessed button or a double-activation requirement should prevent accidental activation. The PCA pump should acknowledge the request with an audible tone, a tactile response, or a visual display.
- IV Pumps (Pain Control Syringe Pumps) should be able to log up to 200 events including: error codes, alarms, programmed settings, and dose delivery; the data should be retained for at least 1 year. The pain control syringe pump should be able to display dose, concentration, lockout interval, rate, patient requests, and alarm conditions.
- Pain control syringe pumps should be designed to allow clinicians to limit access to the reservoir and controls with a lockbox, combination box, or digital code. Patient-controlled analgesic pumps should allow control of continuous (basal) rate, bolus volume, and time between boluses; the IV pump should be capable of delivery continuously from 0.1 to 99.9 ml/hr.
- At least a 12-hour therapy should be supported by the dose delivery system, reservoir, and syringe. For home epidural analgesia unit use, longer operating times are preferable.
- PCA pump systems that run entirely off of battery power should have batteries that can last for several days at nominal dose rates.
- Line-powered PCA pumps should be able to charge independent of the main power switch. Epidural analgesia units should automatically switch to battery operation if line power fails, and run for at least 4 hours at the maximum dose rate.
- Antisiphon valves should accompany intravenous analgesia unit pumps using glass syringes to prevent free-flow in case the syringe breaks.
- Audible alarms or indicators should alert patients and staff to conditions such as low or depleted battery, occlusion, near end of infusion.
- Occlusion alarm should be sound at >=6 psi. If complete occlusion occurs, the patient-controlled analgesic pump should alarm within three dose activations at every dose-volume setting.
- Facilities should consider the ease of transport before purchasing. To facilitate transportation of epidural analgesia units, many suppliers offer specialized bags or pouches.
- For most patient-controlled analgesic pump models, free flow protection depends on the use of tubing with an integral pressure activated valve, to connect the pump reservoir to the patient catheter. This valve should allow fluid to flow to the patient only when enough positive pressure is generated by the pump to open the valve.
- The key issue of assessment for free-flow protection should be to determine if a tubing set is protected rather than whether a particular patient-controlled analgesic pump model is acceptable.
- Facilities need to make sure they do not stock extension sets without a pressure-activated valve in clinical locations where PCA pumps are used.
- Some pain control syringe pumps allow the use of larger reservoirs, which may require less frequent reservoir changes.
- Some manufacturers of intravenous analgesia units offer prefilled reservoirs, which are usually more expensive than reservoirs filled by the pharmacy, but can be useful in small pharmacies with limited staff, and may also help avoid human errors and accidents associated with filling and labeling reservoirs.
Read more valuable tips on the Medical Equipment Buying Guide by MedWOW >>




