Chemistry - EG residues
Ethylene glycol contamination from unexpected sources creates toxicity risks - antifreeze exposure, polyester manufacturing residues, or sterilization system leaks introduce this nephrotoxic compound requiring sensitive detection and quantification. Ethylene glycol residue testing addresses contamination from antifreeze exposure during equipment maintenance, polyester manufacturing where glycol represents polymerization residue, or sterilization processes where system leaks introduce this toxic compound. GC-FID quantification following ISO 10993-7 and 10993-12 extraction provides reliable measurement of this toxic compound that causes renal failure through metabolic conversion to oxalic acid. Critical for PET-based devices where residual glycol indicates incomplete polymerization compromising material properties and introducing toxicity, hemodialysis components with direct blood contact where glycol exposure causes severe systemic toxicity, and validating cleaning after equipment maintenance with glycol-containing fluids preventing cross-contamination to products. For polyethylene terephthalate medical devices, ethylene glycol serves as the diol component in polymerization with residual monomer indicating inadequate reaction completion or material degradation. The testing becomes essential when investigating unexpected cytotoxicity potentially caused by glycol contamination, validating new material suppliers ensuring manufacturing processes achieve complete polymerization, or qualifying alternative sterilization methods where some techniques use glycol-based systems. Manufacturing validation confirms processing adequately removes or reacts residual glycol, storage doesn't cause material degradation releasing glycol from polymer chains, and cleaning procedures eliminate glycol from equipment before product processing.