Bair Hugger Warming Device Lawsuit
3M's Bair Hugger forced-air warming blankets used during surgery are alleged to circulate contaminated air, causing deep joint infections after hip and knee replacements.
Last updated: March 6, 2026
What Is the Bair Hugger Lawsuit About?
The Bair Hugger lawsuit is a mass tort litigation alleging that 3M's Bair Hugger forced-air warming device — used in operating rooms across the country — causes deep joint infections by blowing contaminated air over open surgical sites. The cases are consolidated in MDL 2666 in the District of Minnesota, with over 8,490 cases currently pending.
The Bair Hugger is a surgical warming system that blows heated air through a disposable blanket placed over or under a patient during surgery. Its purpose is to prevent hypothermia, which is a recognized surgical risk. Since its introduction in 1987, the Bair Hugger has become the dominant warming device in U.S. operating rooms, used in an estimated 50,000 surgeries per day.
However, plaintiffs allege that the device's design is fundamentally flawed: it draws in ambient operating room air from near floor level — where bacteria and contaminants accumulate — heats it, and then forces it across the surgical site. This allegedly disrupts the sterile laminar airflow designed to protect open surgical wounds, particularly during hip and knee replacement surgeries. The result, plaintiffs claim, is an increased risk of periprosthetic joint infections (PJI) — devastating infections that can require multiple revision surgeries and cause permanent disability.
The Bair Hugger litigation is one of several mass tort cases involving 3M. The company also faces litigation over AFFF firefighting foam and PFAS forever chemicals contamination.
How Forced-Air Warming Causes Contamination
The central allegation in the Bair Hugger lawsuit involves the mechanism by which the device allegedly introduces contaminants into the surgical field. Understanding how operating room airflow works is key to understanding the claims:
The Infection Pathway
Modern operating rooms use a system called laminar airflow — HEPA-filtered air flows downward from the ceiling in a smooth, unidirectional pattern to keep the surgical field as sterile as possible. Plaintiffs allege that the Bair Hugger disrupts this critical system through the following mechanism:
- Floor-level contamination: In any operating room, bacteria, skin cells, and other contaminants naturally settle at floor level despite cleaning protocols. This is a well-documented phenomenon in infection control research.
- Air intake and heating: The Bair Hugger unit sits at floor level and draws in ambient room air from this contaminated zone, heating it before pushing it through the warming blanket.
- Upward convection currents: The heated air rises from the blanket, creating convection currents that carry bacteria upward and across the open surgical field — directly opposing the intended downward laminar airflow from the ceiling HEPA filters.
- Surgical site contamination: Bacteria carried by these turbulent air currents can land on exposed prosthetic implant components or the open wound, leading to periprosthetic joint infection.
This is particularly dangerous during hip and knee replacement surgeries because prosthetic implant surfaces provide an ideal environment for bacterial colonization — once bacteria adhere to the implant surface and form a biofilm, the infection becomes extremely difficult to treat with antibiotics alone.
Developed a Joint Infection After Surgery?
If you had a hip or knee replacement and developed a deep joint infection, a Bair Hugger device may have been used during your procedure. Get a free case evaluation today.
Who Qualifies for the Bair Hugger Lawsuit?
You may qualify to file a Bair Hugger lawsuit if you developed a deep joint infection after a surgery where the device was used. The following criteria are generally used to evaluate potential claims:
Do You Qualify for the Bair Hugger Lawsuit?
You may be eligible if you meet the following criteria. Consult an attorney for a personalized evaluation.
- You underwent hip replacement or knee replacement surgery (or other major orthopedic procedure)
- A Bair Hugger forced-air warming device was used during your surgery (check surgical records)
- You developed a deep joint infection or periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) after surgery
- You required revision surgery (removal/replacement of prosthetic joint) due to infection
- You were hospitalized for extended IV antibiotic treatment after the infection
- You experienced chronic pain, permanent mobility limitations, or other lasting complications from the infection
- Your infection developed within a timeframe consistent with surgical contamination (days to months post-surgery)
- You are within the statute of limitations for your state (varies — consult an attorney)
Not every post-surgical infection is caused by a Bair Hugger device. An attorney will review your medical records to determine whether the device was used during your procedure and whether your infection is consistent with the contamination pathway alleged in the lawsuit. Understanding how to join a mass tort lawsuit can help you prepare for the evaluation process.
Lawsuit Timeline
The Bair Hugger litigation has been ongoing for over a decade. Here are the key milestones:
Lawsuit Timeline
Bair Hugger Enters the Market
Arizant Healthcare introduces the Bair Hugger forced-air warming system. It quickly becomes the dominant surgical warming device, eventually used in over 80% of U.S. surgeries requiring patient warming.
Contamination Concerns Raised
Researchers and medical professionals begin publishing studies questioning whether forced-air warming devices could disrupt laminar airflow in operating rooms and increase surgical site infection risk.
Lawsuits Filed Against 3M
Patients who developed deep joint infections after hip and knee replacement surgeries begin filing lawsuits alleging the Bair Hugger device caused their infections by circulating contaminated air.
MDL 2666 Created
The Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation establishes MDL 2666 in the District of Minnesota, consolidating federal Bair Hugger lawsuits for coordinated pretrial proceedings.
3M Acquires Arizant Healthcare
3M had previously acquired Arizant Healthcare, the original manufacturer and developer of the Bair Hugger system, bringing the litigation directly under 3M's corporate umbrella.
Bellwether Trials Begin
Initial bellwether trials are conducted. Some early rulings favor 3M on causation issues, but the litigation continues as plaintiffs refine their scientific evidence and legal theories.
Ongoing Litigation and Discovery
Discovery continues with thousands of pending cases. Additional scientific studies on operating room air quality and infection risks are published. Individual cases proceed in state courts as well.
Active Litigation Continues
Over 8,490 cases remain pending in MDL 2666. Attorneys continue to develop evidence and prepare for additional trial dates. Settlement discussions are ongoing.
Settlement Amounts and Projections
As of early 2026, no global settlement has been reached in the Bair Hugger MDL. The litigation has produced mixed results in early bellwether trials, but over 8,490 cases remain pending. Based on the severity of deep joint infections and comparable medical device litigation, legal analysts have projected the following potential settlement ranges:
Estimated Settlement Ranges
These ranges are estimates based on publicly available settlement data and comparable cases. Individual results vary significantly.
Individual compensation will depend on factors including the severity of your infection, the number of revision surgeries required, the extent of permanent disability, and the resulting medical expenses and lost quality of life. For a deeper understanding of how settlement values are determined, read our guide on mass tort settlement amounts.
How to File a Bair Hugger Claim
If you developed a deep joint infection after a surgery where the Bair Hugger device was used, here is the process for pursuing a legal claim:
How to File a Bair Hugger Lawsuit Claim
Free Case Evaluation
Contact an attorney for a free, no-obligation review of your post-surgical joint infection and Bair Hugger exposure history.
Medical Records Review
Your attorney obtains surgical records confirming a Bair Hugger device was used during your procedure and documents your subsequent infection diagnosis and treatment.
Infection Documentation
Medical records establishing the deep joint infection diagnosis, cultures, revision surgeries, antibiotic treatment, and long-term outcomes are collected.
Filing Your Claim
Your attorney files your individual lawsuit, which is consolidated into MDL 2666 in the District of Minnesota for coordinated pretrial proceedings.
Discovery and Expert Analysis
Attorneys conduct discovery, retain infection control experts, and develop your case theory linking the Bair Hugger device to your specific infection.
Settlement or Trial
Cases resolve through negotiated settlement or jury verdict. Your attorney works on contingency — you pay nothing unless you receive compensation.
For a comprehensive overview of the mass tort process, read our guide on how mass tort lawsuits work. You can also learn about why legal representation matters in complex medical device cases.
Named Defendants
The Bair Hugger lawsuit names the following defendants:
- 3M Company — 3M is the current corporate parent of the Bair Hugger product line. As one of the world's largest conglomerates, 3M faces mass tort litigation on multiple fronts, including AFFF firefighting foam and combat arms earplugs. 3M acquired Arizant Healthcare and continued manufacturing and marketing the Bair Hugger system despite emerging concerns about infection risk.
- Arizant Healthcare (3M subsidiary) — Arizant Healthcare is the original developer and manufacturer of the Bair Hugger forced-air warming system. Founded by Dr. Scott Augustine, Arizant developed the technology in the late 1980s. The company was acquired by 3M in 2010 for approximately $810 million and operates as a 3M subsidiary.
Plaintiffs allege that both 3M and Arizant were aware of research linking forced-air warming to increased surgical site infection risk and that they failed to adequately warn healthcare providers and patients. The lawsuits further allege that alternative warming technologies exist that do not create the same contamination risk, and that the defendants prioritized market dominance and profits over patient safety.
Scientific and Medical Evidence
The scientific evidence in the Bair Hugger litigation is actively contested. Here is an overview of the key evidence from both sides:
Evidence Supporting Plaintiffs' Claims
- Operating room airflow studies: Multiple studies have demonstrated that forced-air warming devices create convection currents that disrupt laminar airflow patterns in operating rooms, potentially carrying floor-level contaminants toward the surgical field.
- Particle and bacterial movement research: Researchers have used smoke visualization and particle counting to show that forced-air warming creates measurable upward air currents that can transport particles and bacteria.
- Comparative infection rate analyses: Some studies have compared infection rates in surgeries using forced-air warming versus alternative warming methods (such as conductive warming) and found potentially higher infection rates with forced-air systems.
- FDA adverse event data: Reports in the FDA's MAUDE database have documented post-surgical infections in patients where Bair Hugger devices were used.
3M's Defense
- 3M contends that the Bair Hugger device has been safely used in hundreds of millions of surgeries over more than three decades.
- The company argues that post-surgical infections have many causes — including the patient's own skin bacteria, surgical technique, and hospital hygiene — and that no causal link between the Bair Hugger and increased infection rates has been definitively proven.
- Some early bellwether trials have resulted in rulings favorable to 3M on causation issues, though the litigation continues.
The causation question remains central to this litigation. As the MDL progresses and additional studies are published, the strength of the scientific evidence on both sides will continue to evolve.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Bair Hugger warming device?
How does the Bair Hugger allegedly cause infections?
What types of surgeries are involved in the Bair Hugger lawsuit?
What is a deep joint infection (periprosthetic joint infection)?
Has 3M settled any Bair Hugger cases?
How much compensation could I receive from the Bair Hugger lawsuit?
Is there a deadline to file a Bair Hugger lawsuit?
Do I need to pay anything upfront to file a Bair Hugger claim?
Legal Disclaimer
This is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. It does not create an attorney-client relationship. The information presented may not reflect the most current legal developments. Consult a qualified attorney in your jurisdiction for advice about your specific situation.
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