Performance Testing of Huber Needles for Coring of Port Septa

2010 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Oleg Vesnovsky ◽  
Jon P. Casamento ◽  
Mary E. Brooks ◽  
Matthew R. Schwerin ◽  
William A. Herman ◽  
...  

The Food and Drug Administration received complaints of Huber needles creating cores in the septa of ports of gastric banding devices. One of these complaints represented a cluster of similar events, even though no deviations from design specifications or recommended practices were subsequently identified by the manufacturer. The authors conducted this comparative investigation of off-the-shelf Huber needles and ports from several manufacturers to determine if engineering parameters could be identified that could account for the coring complaints. Huber needles from ten manufacturers were evaluated for coring using intravascular access ports from five manufacturers. A detailed optical analysis was also performed to identify needle features that would possibly account for coring. The majority of the tested needles performed as they should, i.e., they perforated the port septa without creating cores. However, needles that did produce cores were found to have sharp edges at the heel edge of the needle lumen, the edge of the ground bevel opposite from the needle tip that opens to the inner surface of the cannula tube. Manufacturing processes, which dulled or rounded the sharp heel of the bevel after bevel grinding, prevented coring. As a result of this investigation one manufacturer voluntarily recalled their product and another manufacturer implemented coring testing as part of their quality control. To prevent coring needles from entering the market as a result of manufacturing flaws, optical inspection of the heel edge and coring testing should be performed as part of routine quality control.

Author(s):  
R. J. Eggert

Abstract Engineered products are designed for manufacture using nominal values and tolerances. As such, finished products will more or less satisfy design specifications depending on the actual materials and manufacturing processes used. Design feasibility, therefore, depends on how these variations impact specified constraints. Probabilistic feasibility analysis can be used to extend conventional feasibility analysis. By using moment matching and simulation, the probability of points occurring in the design space can be evaluated. The resulting values establish the limits of feasibility and the amount of feasibility in between. The nature of variation in mechanical design is introduced along with concepts of variation propagation in functions of random variables. Moment matching methods are applied to illustrative cases consisting of deterministic and probabilistic constraint equations, resulting in three dimensional feasibility mappings of each design space.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (NOR) ◽  
pp. 000021-000028
Author(s):  
Artem Ivanov

Abstract Utilisation of light emitting diodes (LEDs) and printed electroluminescent elements for manufacturing of flexible displays to be integrated in textile items was analysed. The comparative investigation focused on the necessary manufacturing processes, on the architecture of driver electronics, on achievable display brightness, on lifetime expectations and reliability aspects of the systems. Printed electroluminescent display demonstrators were manufactured and integrated in jackets for the currently running field test. Description of the produced systems as well as the results of the comparative analysis are presented.


2011 ◽  
Vol 401 (10) ◽  
pp. 3141-3152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judith C. Chow ◽  
John G. Watson ◽  
Jerome Robles ◽  
Xiaoliang Wang ◽  
L.-W. Antony Chen ◽  
...  

1965 ◽  
Vol 180 (1) ◽  
pp. 673-688
Author(s):  
R. Towell

This paper outlines methods developed to control the quality of incoming materials and finished components with emphasis on the performance that is ultimately required from them. The examples given are taken from diesel engineering but the basic ideas apply to all industries whose final products consist of an assembly of components which are complete in themselves. The quality control of materials and components fills an important role in ensuring that the technical requirements written into a specification by a designer are met by suppliers. The author outlines various techniques developed in his company to achieve this. The paper has two main sections: ( a) quality control of incoming materials, and ( b) performance control of components. The first part deals with the controls established for cast-iron components of various sizes ranging from bedplates and columns weighing about 20 tons to piston rings weighing less than one pound. Ultrasonic testing is briefly discussed as also is the material specification for white metal bearings. The second part of the paper gives examples of performance testing of a number of diesel engine components together with brief details of some of the test rigs that have been developed to carry out the tests. Some of the components discussed in this section are piston rings, crankshafts, camshafts, cams, and fuel injection equipment.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir Kozlovsky ◽  
Yury Klochkov

Abstract A generalized quality criterion is proposed for the processes of designing and manufacturing electrical equipment. The relationship between the parameters of the technological process of manufacturing electrical equipment and the ones of statistical plans acceptance quality control is taking into account for the calculation of the criterion. This creates the prerequisites for effective management of design and manufacturing processes to achieve the desired level of quality.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina Bertolin ◽  
Stefano Ferrari ◽  
Claudia Breda ◽  
Barbara Ferrari ◽  
Diego Ponzin ◽  
...  

Abstract Background. Conjunctival epithelial stem cell therapy represents a potential and valuable therapeutic option for people suffering from conjunctival disorders. We recently developed a research protocol for the ex vivo cultivation of conjunctival epithelial cells. However, manufacturing and release of any Advanced Therapy Medicinal Product (ATMP) must be designed and planned according to the Good Manufacturing Practices (GMPs) guidelines. GMPs require the development and validation of properly defined manufacturing processes, analysis methods and process validations. Our previous experience with GMP-cultured corneal epithelial stem cells for clinical application on patients with limbal stem cell deficiency led us to set up a protocol for cultivation of conjunctival cells with standards complying with the requests for clinical studies. The major challenge for cell-based products is to develop manufacturing processes while maintaining the critical quality parameters in terms of safety, identity, purity and potency.Results. The manufacturing process was re-designed in order to include all the quality control assays needed for the release of any ATMP, i.e., sterility, morphology, cell viability, dose, cell identity and impurities, potency, lack of pyrogens, mycoplasma and viral detection. Methods and acceptance values were set for all the assays. Quality control assays to evaluate safety and efficacy were also investigated.Conclusion. Here, we describe the main phases of the manufacturing process of a conjunctival stem cell-based product to use in clinical applications. Such characterization is crucial for the preparation of documents and dossiers needed by the competent authorities to start a phase I clinical study on patients with conjunctival disorders. The procedure necessary to reach the marketing authorization of such a new cell-based product is still long, but, if reliable and validated, we believe that, in the near future, patients with conjunctival disorders might have a new treatment based on transplantation of autologous cultured conjunctival epithelial stem cells.


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