Detection of Hydrophilic Coating on Biomedical Devices via Fluorescent Nanoparticles
Sadie Clark, Emilee Rickabaugh, Jamen Cannon, Jessop Oliver | Utah State University
Introduction
Figure 1 – Intravenous Catheter Sheath Introducer
These sheaths have a hydrophilic coating that helps with functionality and biocompatibility of the device.
Surface properties of devices are one of the largest indicators of biocompatibility. Hydrophilic coatings on sheath introducers for intravenous catheters have been shown to reduce complications in their use
- Current detection of the coating is destructive
- Relies on statistical sampling
- Results in significant loss of viable product, and a loss of significant revenue and material for biomedical companies
A proposed alternative includes the addition of a fluorescent nanoparticle:
- ThermoFisher Fluoromax nanoparticles show promising optical and biocompatible properties
Table 1- Goniometer Results
| Sample | Left Contact Angle | Right Contact Angle | Average |
|---|---|---|---|
| Un-coated Sheath | 110.5 ± 9.7° | 108.4 ± 11.4° | 109.5 ± 9.6° |
| Coated Sheath | 54.7 ± 4.7° | 50.4 ± 2.9° | 52.6 ± 4.19° |
| Coated Sheath With Fluorophore | 61.3 ± 4.4° | 53.8 ± 6.2° | 57.5 ± 5.3° |
Work completed
Fluorophore additive
- Dilution ratios
- 10% v/v chosen
- Coating process
- Goniometer testing
- Statistical analysis
Design solution research
- Toxicity evaluation
- Process incorporation
Results
Goniometer testing on coated sheath with fluorophore
- Hydrophilic properties were conserved
- Further toxicity testing required
Statistical testing on samples
- Identification of uncoated or contaminated sheaths
- Experimental sample (n = 53) produced
- 83% accurate identification of contaminated product
- 13% of samples falsely identified as contaminated
- 4% of samples falsely identified as not contaminated
Figure 3 – Sheath Under UV Light
Modified Coating viewed under UV light. 10% concentration of fluorophore with a contaminated sheath on the right.
Figure 2 – Goniometer Images
Coated sheath showing hydrophilic properties (left), modified coated sheath with similar hydrophilic properties (center) and uncoated sheath showing hydrophobic properties (right)
Future Work
Next steps of this project include:
- Second round of statistical analysis with comparison to Congo Red Dye test
- Determine biocompatibility
- Cost and repeatability analysis
- Quantification of visual inspection
- Incorporation on assembly line
Study conducted with funding from Merit Medical, and support from Dr. Yu Huang at Utah State University
1. Thermo Scientific Fluoro-Max Fluorescent Beads. ThermoFIsher Scientific.. (n.d.). Retrieved November 5, 2021, from https://www.thermofisher.com/order/catalog/product/G0100