Biocomp - Hemocompatibility - Hemolysis (material induced)
Blood compatibility determines success for cardiovascular devices and extracorporeal circuits - hemolysis destroys red blood cells causing anemia, jaundice, and potential renal failure making this testing critical for blood-contacting applications. Hemolysis testing following ISO 10993-4 evaluates red blood cell damage potential using human erythrocytes, providing clinically relevant assessment of blood compatibility required for all blood-contacting devices. The protocol accommodates both direct contact methods placing devices in blood and extract testing evaluating leachable substances, with spectrophotometric measurement of released hemoglobin quantifying damage relative to controls. Essential device categories include all cardiovascular implants where chronic blood contact demands demonstrated hemocompatibility, extracorporeal circuits processing blood outside body, blood collection devices where hemolysis compromises diagnostic accuracy, and any intravascular device contacting flowing blood. The test detects both mechanical hemolysis from surface roughness causing physical damage and chemical hemolysis from leachables disrupting cell membranes, with regulatory submissions requiring hemolysis rates below 5% for most devices. For cardiovascular stents and heart valves, low hemolysis proves critical preventing anemia from chronic red cell destruction, while dialysis membranes require assessment ensuring blood processing doesn't cause unacceptable cell damage. The testing validates surface treatments reducing hemolytic potential, confirms material selections don't release hemolytic substances, and demonstrates that sterilization doesn't create surface characteristics promoting hemolysis. Manufacturing quality control uses hemolysis testing detecting surface contamination or roughness increases that could elevate hemolysis rates, supporting process control maintaining blood compatibility throughout production.