Packaging - Visual inspection
Package defects invisible during production become catastrophic when sterile barriers fail - tears, wrinkles, incomplete seals, or material flaws compromise sterility causing infections, recalls, and regulatory action long after products leave manufacturing. Visual inspection of packaging following ISO 11607 and ASTM F1886 standards identifies defects that could compromise sterile barrier properties through systematic examination evaluating seal integrity, material defects, and overall package quality. Critical for validating packaging processes ensuring consistent seal formation without defects, routine quality control detecting package compromises before product release, and investigating contamination potentially linked to packaging breaches enabling microbial ingress. The standardized approach uses defined acceptance criteria for various defect types including seal integrity assessment checking for channels or incomplete seals, material examination detecting tears, punctures, or delamination, and overall package evaluation identifying wrinkles, folds, or other defects compromising performance. For sterile medical devices, visual inspection serves as fundamental release test complementing physical testing, validates that handling and distribution don't damage packages, and provides immediate feedback about process problems causing defects. The systematic examination protocols ensure consistent defect detection across inspectors, support training programs establishing inspection standards, and enable trending identifying common defect types requiring process improvements. Manufacturing validation confirms inspection procedures reliably detect critical defects, process improvements demonstrably reduce defect rates, and packaging equipment maintains performance producing consistently acceptable packages.