IS 18879 : Part 10 : 2024/ISO 8536-10 : 2015 Infusion Equipment for Medical Use - Part 10 Accessories for Fluid Lines for Single Use with Pressure Infusion Equipment

ICS 11.040.20

MHD 12

NATIONAL FOREWORD

This Indian Standard (Part 10) which is identical to ISO 8536-10 : 2015 'Infusion equipment for medical use - Part 10: Accessories for fluid lines for single use with pressure infusion equipment' issued by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) was adopted by the Bureau of Indian Standards on the recommendation of the Hospital Equipment and Surgical Disposable Products Sectional Committee and after approval of the Medical Equipment and Hospital Planning Division Council.

This Indian Standard is published in fifteen parts. The other parts in this series are:

Part 1 Infusion glass bottles

Part 2 Closures for infusion bottles

Part 3 Aluminium caps for infusion bottles

Part 4 Infusion sets for single use, gravity feed

Part 5 Burette infusion sets for single use, gravity feed

Part 6 Freeze drying closures for infusion bottles

Part 7 Caps made of aluminium-plastics combinations for infusion bottles

Part 8 Infusion sets for single use with pressure infusion apparatus

Part 9 Fluid lines for single use with pressure infusion equipment

Part 11 Infusion filters for single use with pressure infusion equipment

Part 12 Check valves for single use

Part 13 Graduated flow regulators for single use with fluid contact

Part 14 Clamps and flow regulators for transfusion and infusion equipment without fluid contact

Part 15 Light-protective infusion sets for single use

The text of ISO standard has been approved as suitable for publication as an Indian Standard without deviations. Certain conventions are however not identical to those used in Indian Standards. Attention is particularly drawn to the following:

a) Wherever the words 'International Standard' appear referring to this standard, they should be read as 'Indian Standard'; and

b) Comma (,) has been used as a decimal marker while in Indian Standards, the current practice is to use a point (.) as the decimal marker.