21 CFR §870.1345
Verified against eCFR.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on eCFR.gov ↗
- (a)Identification. An intravascular bleed monitor is a probe, catheter, or catheter introducer that measures changes in bioimpedance and uses an algorithm to detect or monitor progression of potential internal bleeding complications.
- (b)Classification. Class II (special controls). The special controls for this device are:
- (1)In vivo animal performance testing must demonstrate that the device performs as intended under anticipated conditions of use and evaluate the following:
- (2)Non-clinical performance testing data must demonstrate that the device performs as intended under anticipated conditions of use. The following performance characteristics must be tested:
- (i)Tensile testing of joints and materials;
- (ii)Mechanical integrity testing;
- (iii)Friction testing;
- (iv)Flush testing;
- (v)Air leakage and liquid leakage testing;
- (vi)Latching and unlatching testing;
- (vii)Kink and bend testing;
- (viii)Insertion force testing;
- (ix)Torque testing;
- (x)Corrosion testing; and
- (xi)Dimensional tolerance testing.
- (3)Performance data must support the sterility and pyrogenicity of the device components intended to be provided sterile.
- (4)Performance data must support the shelf life of the device by demonstrating continued sterility, package integrity, and device functionality over the identified shelf life.
- (5)The patient contacting components of the device must be demonstrated to be biocompatible.
- (6)Software verification, validation, and hazard analysis must be performed.
- (7)Performance data must demonstrate electromagnetic compatibility (EMC), electrical safety, thermal safety, and mechanical safety.
- (8)Human factors performance evaluation must demonstrate that the user can correctly use the device, based solely on reading the directions for use.
- (9)Labeling must include: