Chemistry - Total Hydrocarbons (THC) - analysis
Petroleum-based contamination represents the silent killer of biocompatibility - invisible hydrocarbon residues from machining and assembly processes trigger cytotoxicity, inflammatory responses, and device failures that appear only after expensive biological testing reveals problems. Following ISO 10993-12 extraction requirements and ISO 9377-2 analytical methodology, Total Hydrocarbon analysis provides comprehensive assessment of oil and grease contamination that could compromise device biocompatibility or functionality. The 24-hour hexane extraction at controlled temperature ensures complete recovery of petroleum-based contaminants while the GC-MS analysis delivers both quantitative measurement and qualitative identification of specific hydrocarbon sources. Manufacturing validation particularly benefits from THC analysis when qualifying new machining centers where cutting fluid contamination must be controlled, validating parts washing systems to demonstrate residue removal effectiveness, or establishing cleanliness specifications for outsourced components preventing supplier contamination from reaching finished devices. The chromatographic fingerprint distinguishes between different contamination sources - mineral oils from machining operations, silicone lubricants from assembly processes, or polymer additives from injection molding - enabling targeted remediation strategies addressing specific contamination origins. For implantable devices undergoing biocompatibility testing per ISO 10993, hydrocarbon residues often explain unexpected cytotoxicity or inflammatory responses, as even trace petroleum contamination can trigger adverse biological reactions through direct cellular toxicity or immune system activation. Critical applications include orthopedic implants where hydrocarbon residues interfere with osseointegration by preventing protein adhesion, cardiovascular devices where oil contamination affects hemocompatibility and thrombogenicity, and drug-device combinations where hydrocarbons alter drug stability or release profiles through partitioning effects.