Volatile Compound Emissions from Stereolithography Three-Dimensional Printed Cured Resin Models for Biomedical Applications

被引:4
|
作者
Pham, Y. Lan [1 ,2 ]
Wojnowski, Wojciech [3 ,4 ]
Beauchamp, Jonathan [1 ]
机构
[1] Fraunhofer Inst Proc Engn & Packaging IVV, Dept Sensory Analyt & Technol, D-85354 Freising Weihenstephan, Germany
[2] Friedrich Alexander Univ Erlangen Nurnberg, Chair Aroma & Smell Res, Dept Chem & Pharm, D-91054 Erlangen, Germany
[3] Gdansk Univ Technol, Dept Analyt Chem, PL-80233 Gdansk, Poland
[4] Univ Oslo, Dept Chem, N-0315 Oslo, Norway
关键词
3D; POLYMER; BREATH;
D O I
10.1021/acs.chemrestox.2c00317
中图分类号
R914 [药物化学];
学科分类号
100701 ;
摘要
Stereolithography three-dimensional printing is used increasingly in biomedical applications to create components for use in healthcare and therapy. The exposure of patients to volatile organic compounds (VOCs) emitted from cured resins represents an element of concern in such applications. Here, we investigate the biocompatibility in relation to inhalation exposure of volatile emissions of three different cured commercial resins for use in printing a mouthpiece adapter for sampling exhaled breath. VOC emission rates were estimated based on direct analysis using a microchamber/thermal extractor coupled to a proton transfer reaction-mass spectrometer. Complementary analyses using compre-hensive gas chromatography-mass spectrometry aided compound identification. Major VOCs emitted from the cured resins were associated with polymerization agents, additives, and postprocessing procedures and included alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, hydrocarbons, esters, and terpenes. Total VOC emissions from cubes printed using the general-purpose resin were approximately an order of magnitude higher than those of the cubes printed using resins dedicated to biomedical applications at the respective test temperatures (40 and 25 degrees C). Daily inhalation exposures were estimated and compared with daily tolerable intake levels or standard thresholds of toxicological concerns. The two resins intended for biomedical applications were deemed suitable for fabricating an adapter mouthpiece for use in breath research. The general-purpose resin was unsuitable, with daily inhalation exposures for breath sampling applications at 40 degrees C estimated at 310 mu g day-1 for propylene glycol (tolerable intake (TI) limit of 190 mu g day-1) and 1254 mu g day-1 for methyl acrylate (TI of 43 mu g day-1).
引用
收藏
页码:369 / 379
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Diverse Applications of Three-Dimensional Printing in Biomedical Engineering: A Review
    Agarwal, Prachi
    Arora, Gargi
    Panwar, Amit
    Mathur, Vidhi
    Srinivasan, Varadharajan
    Pandita, Deepti
    Vasanthan, Kirthanashri S. S.
    3D PRINTING AND ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING, 2023, 10 (05) : 1140 - 1163
  • [32] Biomedical applications of three-dimensional bioprinted craniofacial tissue engineering
    Charbe, Nitin Bharat
    Tambuwala, Murtaza
    Palakurthi, Sushesh Srivatsa
    Warokar, Amol
    HronniC-JahjefendiC, Altijana
    Bakshi, Hamid
    Zacconi, Flavia
    Mishra, Vijay
    Khadse, Saurabh
    Aljabali, Alaa A.
    El-Tanani, Mohamed
    Serrano-Aroca, Angel
    Palakurthi, Srinath
    BIOENGINEERING & TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE, 2023, 8 (01)
  • [33] The Current Versatility of Polyurethane Three-Dimensional Printing for Biomedical Applications
    Griffin, Michelle
    Castro, Nathan
    Bas, Onur
    Saifzadeh, Siamak
    Butler, Peter
    Hutmacher, Dietmar Werner
    TISSUE ENGINEERING PART B-REVIEWS, 2020, 26 (03) : 272 - 283
  • [34] Rapid-printed Three-dimensional Models for Craniomaxillofacial Trauma
    Scharf, Isabel M.
    Mathis, Sydney A.
    Zeid, Naji Bou
    Saini, Devansh
    Nahass, George R.
    Arias, Eduardo
    Purnell, Chad A.
    Zhao, Linping
    Patel, Pravin K.
    Alkureishi, Lee W. T.
    PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY-GLOBAL OPEN, 2024, 12 (11)
  • [35] Three-Dimensional Simulation of Volatile Organic Compound Mass Flux from the Vadose Zone to Groundwater
    Oostrom, Mart
    Truex, Michael J.
    Tartakovsky, Guzel D.
    Wietsma, Tom W.
    GROUND WATER MONITORING AND REMEDIATION, 2010, 30 (03): : 45 - 56
  • [36] Three-Dimensional Printed Dielectric Substrates for Radio Frequency Applications
    Tummala, Vana Snigdha
    Mian, Ahsan
    Chamok, Nowrin H.
    Poduval, Dhruva
    Ali, Mohammod
    Clifford, Jallisa
    Majumdar, Prasun
    JOURNAL OF ELECTRONIC PACKAGING, 2017, 139 (02)
  • [37] Personalized Three-Dimensional Printed Models in Congenital Heart Disease
    Sun, Zhonghua
    Lau, Ivan
    Wong, Yin How
    Yeong, Chai Hong
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE, 2019, 8 (04):
  • [38] The Role of Three-dimensional Printed Models in Women's Health
    Alrawi, Afnan
    Basha, Tasneem
    Elmeligy, Ahmed O.
    Mousa, Noha A.
    Mohammed, Ghada
    WOMENS HEALTH, 2023, 19
  • [39] Development of Three-Dimensional Printed Craniocerebral Models for Simulated Neurosurgery
    Lan, Qing
    Chen, Ailin
    Zhang, Tan
    Li, Guowei
    Zhu, Qing
    Fan, Xiaomin
    Ma, Cheng
    Xu, Tao
    WORLD NEUROSURGERY, 2016, 91 : 434 - 442
  • [40] Three dimensional printed biofilms: Fabrication, design and future biomedical and environmental applications
    Lazarus, Emily
    Meyer, Anne S.
    Ikuma, Kaoru
    Rivero, Iris V.
    MICROBIAL BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2024, 17 (01):