Chemistry - ICP-MS analysis (1st element) - Base
Semi-quantitative screening identifies potential problems but regulatory submissions and risk assessment demand definitive quantification - estimating contamination levels proves insufficient when patient safety decisions require precise measurements. Quantitative ICP-MS analysis for specific elements provides definitive measurement of metallic contamination following ISO 10993-12 extraction and EPA 200.8 methodology, delivering regulatory-grade data for elements of toxicological concern. This targeted approach delivers precise quantification supporting risk assessment per ISO 10993-17 that calculates safety margins comparing measured levels against allowable limits derived from toxicological data. The water extraction at physiologically relevant conditions ensures clinical relevance simulating actual patient exposure, while ICP-MS sensitivity enables detection at toxicologically significant levels often below one microgram per device. Critical for validating that implantable devices meet limits for carcinogenic metals like nickel and chromium where chronic exposure poses cancer risks, confirming blood-contacting devices won't release hemolytic elements like copper or zinc at levels causing red blood cell damage, and demonstrating that manufacturing processes adequately remove metallic contamination from machining, welding, or surface treatments. For permanent implants, quantitative elemental analysis supports lifetime exposure calculations required by ISO 10993-17, multiplying daily leaching rates by implant duration to calculate total patient exposure for comparison against toxicological thresholds. Cardiovascular devices require stringent limits because metallic ions directly enter bloodstream, while orthopedic implants need quantification ensuring wear debris and corrosion products don't exceed safe levels. The quantitative data enables statistical process control tracking elemental levels across manufacturing lots, detecting trends suggesting equipment degradation or raw material quality changes before contamination reaches action limits. Regulatory submissions require element-specific quantification with documented detection limits, calibration linearity, and measurement uncertainty supporting safety conclusions.