Yoganandan Narayan, Pintar Frank A, Zhang Jiangyue, Stemper Brian D, Philippens Mat
Department of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, 9200 West Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI, 53226, USA,
Ann Biomed Eng. 2008 Mar;36(3):406-14. doi: 10.1007/s10439-007-9422-7. Epub 2008 Jan 8.
Biomechanical studies using postmortem human subjects (PMHS) in lateral impact have focused primarily on chest and pelvis injuries, mechanisms, tolerances, and comparison with side impact dummies. A paucity of data exists on the head-neck junction, i.e., forces and moments, and cranial angular accelerations. The objective of this study was to determine lateral impact-induced three-dimensional temporal forces and moments at the head-neck junction and cranial linear and angular accelerations from sled tests using PMHS and compare with responses obtained from an anthropomorphic test device (dummy) designed for lateral impact. Following initial evaluations, PMHS were seated on a sled, restrained using belts, and lateral acceleration was applied. Specimens were instrumented with a pyramid-shaped nine-accelerometer package to record cranial accelerations. A sled accelerometer was used to record the input acceleration. Radiographs and computed tomography scans were obtained to identify pathology. A similar testing protocol was adopted for dummy tests. Results indicated that profiles of forces and moments at the head-neck junction and cranial accelerations were similar between the two models. However, peak forces and moments at the head-neck junction were lower in the dummy than PMHS. Peak cranial linear and angular accelerations were also lower in the dummy than in the PMHS. Fractures to the head-neck complex were not identified in PMHS tests. Peak cranial angular accelerations were suggestive of mild traumatic brain injury with potential for loss of consciousness. Findings from this study with a limited dataset are valuable in establishing response corridors for side impacts and evaluating side impact dummies used in crashworthiness and safety-engineering studies.
利用尸体人类受试者(PMHS)进行的侧面碰撞生物力学研究主要集中在胸部和骨盆损伤、机制、耐受性以及与侧面碰撞假人的比较上。关于头颈部交界处,即力和力矩以及颅骨角加速度的数据很少。本研究的目的是通过使用PMHS的雪橇试验确定侧面碰撞在头颈部交界处引起的三维瞬时力和力矩以及颅骨线性和角加速度,并与从专为侧面碰撞设计的拟人试验装置(假人)获得的响应进行比较。在初步评估后,将PMHS安置在雪橇上,用安全带约束,并施加侧向加速度。标本配备了一个金字塔形的九加速度计组件来记录颅骨加速度。使用雪橇加速度计记录输入加速度。获取X光片和计算机断层扫描以识别病理情况。对假人试验采用了类似的测试方案。结果表明,两种模型在头颈部交界处的力和力矩曲线以及颅骨加速度相似。然而,假人中头颈部交界处的峰值力和力矩低于PMHS。假人中颅骨线性和角加速度的峰值也低于PMHS。在PMHS试验中未发现头颈部复合体骨折。颅骨角加速度峰值提示有轻度创伤性脑损伤,可能导致意识丧失。这项数据集有限的研究结果对于建立侧面碰撞的响应通道以及评估用于耐撞性和安全工程研究的侧面碰撞假人具有重要价值。