Toy maker Fisher-Price, in collaboration with the Consumer Product Safety Commission announced on Tuesday its voluntary recall to inspect Fisher-Price Newborn Rock N' Play Sleepers due to risk of exposure to mold for infants who use them.

Warnings have been issued referring to 800,000 of the infant recliner seats sold at stores and online nationwide since September 2009 priced between $50 and $85. The noted recliners currently in retail stores are not affected by the warning. However, once purchased, mold growth can occur if the sleeper remains wet or dirty after use.

The recliners, manufactured in China, feature a plastic seat held in a tubular metal rocking frame that has a removable seat cushion cover. The Safety Commission said mold can develop between the seat cushion and the plastic frame.

Fisher-Price already received 600 reports of mold and 16 infants were treated for respiratory issues, coughs and hives (symptoms associated with the exposure to mold) after they used the Fisher-Price item, according to the CPSC. Mold has been linked to respiratory illnesses and other infections.

Customers are urged to check the Rock 'N Play recliner "for dark brown, gray or black spots that can indicate the presence of mold under the removable seat cushion." If mold is found, buyers should immediately stop using the product, and contact Fisher-Price for cleaning instructions or further assistance.

The CPSC is interested in receiving incident or injury reports related to the Fisher-Price product recall or having to do with a hazardous experience while the same product. Visit SaferProducts.gov to describe an experience with the product.

For a full list of products recalled by Fisher-Price and safety alerts issued by the toy maker, click here.

Prior to the Rock 'N Play recall, the last recall the company did was in July of 2011.