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Polyurethane protects DePuy's hip and knee replacement products

At medical device maker DePuy Orthopaedics, polyurethane protective packaging from Barger Packaging is playing a key role in getting hip and knee replacement products to DePuy's intended patients.

Warsaw, IN-based DePuy, a Johnson & Johnson Co., ships its hip and knee products in a conventional folding carton. Inside each carton, a sterilized product is hermetically sealed in a PETG thermoform with a polyolefin lidding material heat-sealed to its flanges.

The surfaces of the products themselves are given a relatively rough coating that is engineered to be a "fixation surface." This surface facilitates the process by which the implant integrates itself with surrounding bone and tissue. But the roughness of the surface coating can abrade the PETG thermoform that holds the product, leading, at the very least, to marring of the package from an aesthetic standpoint. It might even damage the PETG material or the polyolefin lidstock to such an extent that sterility could be compromised.

To prevent this, DePuy had used die-cut pieces of PU that prevented abrasion of either the PETG package or its polyolefin lid. While the PU die-cuts performed satisfactorily enough, says Rod Patch, a manager in packaging development at DePuy, a recent switch to thermoformed PU from Barger Packaging has brought a marked improvement.

"The die-cutting process gave us a limited number of options when it came to the surfaces of some of our products," says Patch. "Die-cutting produces a two-dimensional piece that doesn't conform to the product surfaces as well as we'd like. The thermoform goes around corners better and matches very closely whatever geometry our product has.

"Protective properties remain the same as when the die-cut was used. But there are cases where we can specify a thinner and less costly polyurethane sheet yet still provide all the protection we need," Patch says.

- By Pat Reynolds, Editor, Packaging World
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