Duke University, Department of Biomedical Engineering and Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
Traffic Inj Prev. 2013;14 Suppl:S116-27. doi: 10.1080/15389588.2013.806795.
During dynamic injury scenarios, such as motor vehicle crashes, neck biomechanics contribute to head excursion and acceleration, influencing head injuries. One important tool in understanding head and neck dynamics is computational modeling. However, realistic and stable muscle activations for major muscles are required to realize meaningful kinematic responses. The objective was to determine cervical muscle activation states for 6-year-old, 10-year-old, and adult 50th percentile male computational head and neck models. Currently, pediatric models including muscle activations are unable to maintain the head in an equilibrium position, forcing models to begin from nonphysiologic conditions. Recent work has realized a stationary initial geometry and cervical muscle activations by first optimizing responses against gravity. Accordingly, our goal was to apply these methods to Duke University's head-neck model validated using living muscle response and pediatric cadaveric data.
Activation schemes maintaining an upright, stable head for 22 muscle pairs were found using LS-OPT. Two optimization problems were investigated: a relaxed state, which minimized muscle fatigue, and a tensed activation state, which maximized total muscle force. The model's biofidelity was evaluated by the kinematic response to gravitational and frontal impact loading conditions. Model sensitivity and uncertainty analyses were performed to assess important parameters for pediatric muscle response. Sensitivity analysis was conducted using multiple activation time histories. These included constant activations and an optimal muscle activation time history, which varied the activation level of flexor and extensor groups, and activation initiation and termination times.
Relaxed muscle activations decreased with increasing age, maintaining upright posture primarily through extensor activation. Tensed musculature maintained upright posture through coactivation of flexors and extensors, producing up to 32 times the force of the relaxed state. Without muscle activation, the models fell into flexion due to gravitational loading. Relaxed musculature produced 28.6-35.8 N of force to the head, whereas tensed musculature produced 450-1023 N. Pediatric model stiffnesses were most sensitive to muscle physiological cross-sectional area.
Though muscular loads were not large enough to cause vertebral compressive failure, they would provide a prestressed state that could protect the vertebrae during tensile loading but might exacerbate risk during compressive loading. For example, in the 10-year-old, a load of 602 N was produced, though estimated compressive failure tolerance is only 2.8 kN. Including muscles and time-variant activation schemes is vital for producing biofidelic models because both vary by age. The pediatric activations developed represent physiologically appropriate sets of initial conditions and are based on validated adult cadaveric data.
在动态损伤情况下,如机动车碰撞,颈部生物力学有助于头部的偏移和加速,影响头部损伤。理解头颈部动力学的一个重要工具是计算建模。然而,需要现实和稳定的主要肌肉激活来实现有意义的运动学响应。目的是为 6 岁、10 岁和成人 50 百分位男性计算头颈部模型确定颈椎肌肉激活状态。目前,包括肌肉激活的儿科模型无法使头部保持平衡位置,迫使模型从非生理条件开始。最近的工作已经通过首先针对重力优化响应来实现固定初始几何形状和颈椎肌肉激活。因此,我们的目标是将这些方法应用于杜克大学的头颈部模型,该模型使用活体肌肉反应和儿科尸体数据进行了验证。
使用 LS-OPT 找到了 22 对肌肉对维持直立、稳定头部的激活方案。研究了两个优化问题:一个是放松状态,最大限度地减少肌肉疲劳;另一个是紧张激活状态,最大限度地提高总肌肉力。通过对重力和正面冲击加载条件的运动学响应来评估模型的生物逼真度。进行了模型敏感性和不确定性分析,以评估儿科肌肉反应的重要参数。敏感性分析使用了多种激活时间历史。这些包括恒定激活和最佳肌肉激活时间历史,它改变了屈肌和伸肌组的激活水平以及激活的开始和结束时间。
放松肌肉激活随着年龄的增长而降低,主要通过伸肌激活来保持直立姿势。紧张的肌肉通过屈肌和伸肌的共同激活来保持直立姿势,产生的力高达放松状态的 32 倍。没有肌肉激活,模型会因重力加载而进入屈曲状态。放松肌肉产生 28.6-35.8 N 的力到头部,而紧张肌肉产生 450-1023 N。儿科模型的刚度对肌肉生理横截面积最敏感。
尽管肌肉负荷不足以导致椎体压缩性失效,但它们会提供一个预应力状态,可以在拉伸载荷下保护椎体,但在压缩载荷下可能会增加风险。例如,在 10 岁时,产生了 602 N 的载荷,尽管估计的压缩失效容限仅为 2.8 kN。包括肌肉和时变激活方案对于产生生物逼真的模型至关重要,因为它们都随年龄而变化。开发的儿科激活代表了生理上适当的初始条件集,并基于经过验证的成人尸体数据。