Elevate your medical device testing to global standards
Elevate your medical device testing to global standards
Presence of medical devices, including medical implants, in or near a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner environment pose risks due to the electromagnetic interactions such as radiofrequency heating, to patients. The MRI safety testing of medical devices is necessary to ensure the patient's safety, implant performance, and compliance with the regulations.
Our state-of-the-art laboratories, highly skilled professionals, comprehensive international accreditations, and membership in the CB scheme facilitate your market approval in addition to the medical device certification.
TÜV SÜD is one of the leading providers offering a variety of medical device testing services. Our facilities in Minnesota can test the following example devices for MRI Safety: (This is not a complete list, for more details please contact [email protected])
TÜV SÜD offers a wide range of services and tests to assess medical devices' safety in the MRI environment.
Our services include:
If you are unable to find the service you require, contact us. Our laboratory offers a wide range of services to meet your needs.
WHY CHOOSE TÜV SÜD
Key market approvals from a single partner
Marketing advantage and a path to a competitive MR-Labeling
Active involvement in standards development and implementation
The MRI safety testing of a medical device is necessary to ensure patient safety, implant performance, and compliance with regulations. TÜV SÜD's state-of-the-art laboratories, highly skilled professionals, comprehensive international accreditations, and membership in the CB Scheme can facilitate your device's market approval in addition to its medical device certification.
Currently, the following types of medical devices should be tested for MRI safety:
The Food & Drug Administration (FDA) provides guidance to the industry with recommendations on testing to assess the safety and compatibility of medical devices in the Magnetic Resonance (MR) Environment. This guidance includes the recommended format for Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) safety information in medical device labeling.
This guidance document provides recommendations on MRI safety and compatibility assessments and labeling information that should be included in its premarket submissions, including:
The EU Medical Device Regulations (MDR) require medical device manufacturers, especially implant manufacturers, to identify and reduce the risks associated with MRI scanners to ensure patient safety in the MRI environment. Interaction with the Electromagnetic fields of MRI scanners is considered a foreseeable risk, and manufacturers are required to label the devices appropriately. Any device containing metallic, magnetic, or conductive components must be evaluated and tested for RF-induced heating, image artifact, and magnetically induced displacement force and torque.
The MR environment has a variety of unique safety hazards, particularly for patients with implants, external devices, and accessory medical devices. The FDA has implemented a labeling scheme that categorizes whether a medical device or implant is unsafe, conditionally safe, or completely safe to be introduced to an MRI environment.
According to the FDA, here is the current breakdown of MRI Safety Labeling:
Because joint deterioration and corrective orthopedic and surgical procedures are typically monitored via magnetic resonance imaging, many non-active medical implants such as hip joint, knee joint, and shoulder joint replacements must undergo MRI safety testing to assess how these implants will interact and impact an MRI environment. Similarly, cardiovascular medical device implants such as heart valves, stents, catheters, and guidewires should also be thoroughly tested to ensure patient safety.
An AIMD or Active Implantable Medical Device is a device whose operation depends on an electrical energy or power source other than what is generated by the human body or gravity. AIMDs sometimes contain accessories such as lead wires, controllers, and battery packs to operate.
It is intended to be entirely or partially introduced to the human body via surgical or medical means. These devices are implanted to remain post-procedure for extended periods and are subject to more rigorous controls in both the pre-and post-market.
Electrically active devices such as AIMDs can be hazardous within the MRI environment because of the potential interaction with status magnetic fields, RF fields, and gradient fields present, which could cause device failure.
Learn about the steps that medical implant manufacturers must take to ensure the safe operation of their devices in an MR environment
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Download the infographic to learn how TÜV SÜD can support medical devices in MRI Safety Testing
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View the on-webinar to learn about the risks associated with the medical devices in the MRI environment.
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