Toomey D E, Yang K H, Van Ee C A
a Department of Biomedical Engineering , Wayne State University , Detroit , Michigan.
Traffic Inj Prev. 2014;15 Suppl 1:S223-30. doi: 10.1080/15389588.2014.931950.
Physical biomechanical surrogates are critical for testing the efficacy of injury-mitigating safety strategies. The interpretation of measured Hybrid III neck loads in test scenarios resulting in compressive loading modes would be aided by a further understanding of the correlation between the mechanical responses in the Hybrid III neck and the probability of injury in the human cervical spine. The anthropomorphic test device (ATD) peak upper and lower neck responses were measured during dynamic compressive loading conditions comparable to those of postmortem human subject (PMHS) experiments. The peak ATD response could then be compared to the PMHS injury outcomes.
A Hybrid III 50th percentile ATD head and neck assembly was tested under conditions matching those of male PMHS tests conducted on an inverted drop track. This includes variation in impact plate orientation (4 sagittal plane and 2 frontal plane orientations), impact plate surface friction, and ATD initial head/neck orientation. This unique matched data with known injury outcomes were used to evaluate existing ATD neck injury criteria.
The Hybrid III ATD head and neck assembly was found to be robust and repeatable under severe loading conditions. The initial axial force response of the ATD head and neck is very comparable to PMHS experiments up to the point of PMHS cervical column buckle or material failure. An ATD lower neck peak compressive force as low as 6,290 N was associated with an unstable orthopedic cervical injury in a PMHS under equivalent impact conditions. ATD upper neck peak compressive force associated with a 5% probability of unstable cervical orthopedic injury ranged from as low as 3,708 to 3,877 N depending on the initial ATD neck angle.
The correlation between peak ATD compressive neck response and PMHS test outcome in the current study resulted in a relationship between axial load and injury probability consistent with the current Hybrid III injury assessment reference values. The results add to the current understanding of cervical injury probability based on ATD neck compressive loading in that it is the only known study, in addition to Mertz et al. (1978), formulated directly from ATD compressive loading scenarios with known human injury outcomes.
物理生物力学替代指标对于测试减轻损伤的安全策略的有效性至关重要。通过进一步了解混合III型颈部的力学响应与人类颈椎损伤概率之间的相关性,将有助于解释在导致压缩加载模式的测试场景中测得的混合III型颈部负荷。在与尸体人类受试者(PMHS)实验相当的动态压缩加载条件下,测量了拟人测试装置(ATD)颈部上下的峰值响应。然后可以将ATD的峰值响应与PMHS的损伤结果进行比较。
使用50百分位的混合III型ATD头部和颈部组件,在与在倒置跌落轨道上进行的男性PMHS测试相匹配的条件下进行测试。这包括冲击板方向的变化(矢状面4种和额状面2种方向)、冲击板表面摩擦力以及ATD初始头部/颈部方向。这些具有已知损伤结果的独特匹配数据用于评估现有的ATD颈部损伤标准。
发现混合III型ATD头部和颈部组件在严苛的加载条件下具有稳健性和可重复性。在PMHS颈椎柱屈曲或材料失效之前,ATD头部和颈部的初始轴向力响应与PMHS实验非常相似。在等效冲击条件下,低至6290 N的ATD下颈部峰值压缩力与一名PMHS的不稳定骨科颈椎损伤相关。与颈椎不稳定骨科损伤概率为5%相关的ATD上颈部峰值压缩力,根据ATD初始颈部角度的不同,低至3708至3877 N。
在本研究中,ATD颈部压缩峰值响应与PMHS测试结果之间的相关性导致轴向负荷与损伤概率之间的关系与当前的混合III型损伤评估参考值一致。这些结果增加了基于ATD颈部压缩负荷对颈椎损伤概率的当前理解,因为这是除了默茨等人(1978年)之外,唯一一项直接从具有已知人类损伤结果的ATD压缩加载场景得出的研究。