a International Center for Automotive Medicine , University of Michigan , Ann Arbor , Michigan.
Traffic Inj Prev. 2014;15(1):66-72. doi: 10.1080/15389588.2013.829217.
The human body changes as it becomes older. The automotive safety community has been interested in understanding the effect of age on restraint performance. Focus has been placed on characterizing the body's structural changes associated with age and gender. In this study, spine alignment and torso depth were assessed, because both variables have been shown to affect injury risk.
The data was obtained from computed tomography (CT) scans of more than 24,000 patients aged 16 and older. The data consisted of thoracic and lumbar vertebral angles relative to a fixed plane, as well as vertebra-to-front skin and spine-to-back skin distances. Angle measurements were taken in the sagittal plane at each vertebra level from T1 to L5; distance measurements were taken from T6 to L5. The data were analyzed as a function of gender and age with the young group defined as 16 to 29 years old and the older group as 75 and up.
Vertebral angles were different depending on location. They varied from -24.5 ± 8.9° at T2 to 12.2 ± 5.6° at L1. The vertebral angles also varied with age. Angles in the older male group were 1.74 times larger at T1 and 2.03 times larger at T7 than in the young male group. Similar findings were observed for females. The effect of age and gender was modeled with forward/backward selection using a regression model. The vertebra-to-front skin distance also differed depending on vertebral level. It was highest at T10 at 162.5 ± 30.9 mm and lowest at L4 at 125.3 ± 37.3 mm for the entire study population. On average, males had larger distances than females. The spine-to-back distances were greatest in the lumbar area. The spine-to-back distance increased with lower vertebral level, regardless of age. The vertebral angle and distance data were analyzed for a male subgroup approximating the height and weight of a 50th percentile male dummy. The results showed that the vertebra-to-front skin distance increased with age. There was not a clear trend for the spine-to-back skin distance and L1 vertebral angle.
The changes in the vertebral angles, as well as the anterior and posterior spine-to-skin distances along the sagittal plane, were determined as a function of age and gender. The effect was greatest in the mid-thoracic area. Spine alignment and body shape differences need to be considered in human mathematical models used to develop safety countermeasures for the older population, because they may affect the loading path and lead to different seating postures or belt positioning. Supplemental materials are available for this article. Go to the publisher's online edition of Traffic Injury Prevention to view the supplemental file.
人体会随着年龄的增长而发生变化。汽车安全界一直致力于了解年龄对约束性能的影响。研究重点是描述与年龄和性别相关的身体结构变化。在这项研究中,评估了脊柱排列和躯干深度,因为这两个变量都已被证明会影响受伤风险。
该数据来自 24000 多名 16 岁及以上患者的计算机断层扫描(CT)扫描。数据包括相对于固定平面的胸椎和腰椎角度,以及椎骨到前皮肤和脊柱到后皮肤的距离。在矢状平面上,在 T1 到 L5 的每个椎骨水平测量角度测量值;在 T6 到 L5 测量距离测量值。该数据是根据性别和年龄进行分析的,年轻组定义为 16 至 29 岁,老年组定义为 75 岁及以上。
椎体角度因位置而异。它们在 T2 处的变化范围为-24.5±8.9°,在 L1 处的变化范围为 12.2±5.6°。椎体角度也随年龄而变化。老年男性组的 T1 椎体角度比年轻男性组大 1.74 倍,T7 椎体角度比年轻男性组大 2.03 倍。女性也观察到类似的发现。使用回归模型通过向前/向后选择对年龄和性别效应进行建模。椎骨到前皮肤的距离也因椎体水平而异。整个研究人群中,T10 处最高,为 162.5±30.9mm,L4 处最低,为 125.3±37.3mm。平均而言,男性的距离大于女性。脊柱到背部的距离在腰椎区域最大。无论年龄大小,下椎体水平越低,脊柱到背部的距离越大。对近似 50 百分位男性假人身高和体重的男性子组分析了椎体角度和距离数据。结果表明,椎骨到前皮肤的距离随年龄增长而增加。脊柱到背部皮肤的距离和 L1 椎体角度没有明显的趋势。
作为年龄和性别的函数,确定了矢状平面上椎体角度以及前后脊柱到皮肤的距离的变化。中胸区的影响最大。在为老年人群开发安全对策时,需要考虑脊柱排列和身体形状差异,因为它们可能会影响加载路径并导致不同的坐姿或安全带定位。本文提供了补充材料。请访问出版商的《交通伤害预防》在线版本查看补充文件。