Cleared Traditional

K962591 - FOOT WEIGHT ALARM (FDA 510(k) Clearance)

Class II Physical Medicine device cleared through predicate-based substantial equivalence - typically does not require clinical trials.

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Dec 1996
Decision
155d
Days
Class 2
Risk

K962591 is an FDA 510(k) clearance for the FOOT WEIGHT ALARM. Classified as Device, Warning, Overload, External Limb, Powered (product code IRN), Class II - Special Controls.

Submitted by Cleveland Medical Devices, Inc. (Cleveland, US). The FDA issued a Cleared decision on December 4, 1996 after a review of 155 days - an extended review cycle.

This device falls under the Physical Medicine FDA review panel, regulated under 21 CFR 890.5575 - the FDA physical medicine device framework. The Traditional 510(k) pathway establishes clearance through substantial equivalence to a legally marketed predicate device, without requiring clinical trial data.

Device pattern: Standard predicate-based submission. Standard predicate reliance. This clearance follows a standard predicate-based equivalence path within the Physical Medicine review framework, consistent with the majority of Class II 510(k) submissions.

View all Cleveland Medical Devices, Inc. devices

Submission Details

510(k) Number K962591 FDA.gov
FDA Decision Cleared Substantially Equivalent - Traditional 510(k) (SESE)
Date Received July 02, 1996
Decision Date December 04, 1996
Days to Decision 155 days
Submission Type Traditional
Review Panel Physical Medicine (PM)
Summary Summary PDF
Third-party Review No - reviewed directly by FDA
Regulatory Context
Review time vs. panel average
40d slower than avg
Panel avg: 115d · This submission: 155d
Pathway characteristics
Predicate-based equivalence. No clinical trials required.

Device Classification

Product Code IRN Device, Warning, Overload, External Limb, Powered
Device Class Class 2 - Special Controls
CFR Regulation 21 CFR 890.5575
What this classification means

Class II devices require demonstration of substantial equivalence to a legally marketed predicate device. This pathway does not require clinical trials - it relies on engineering equivalence and performance data. Most Physical Medicine devices follow this clearance model.