School of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK 73019, USA.
Mil Med. 2021 Jan 25;186(Suppl 1):537-545. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usaa317.
Repeated blast exposures result in structural damage to the peripheral auditory system (PAS) and the central auditory system (CAS). However, it is difficult to differentiate injuries between two distinct pathways: the mechanical damage in the PAS caused by blast pressure waves transmitted through the ear and the damage in the CAS caused by blast wave impacts on the head or traumatic brain injury. This article reports a preliminary study using a 3D printed chinchilla "helmet" as a head protection device associated with the hearing protection devices (e.g., earplugs) to isolate the CAS damage from the PAS injuries under repeated blast exposures.
A finite element (FE) model of the chinchilla helmet was created based on micro-computed tomography images of a chinchilla skull and inputted into ANSYS for FE analysis on the helmet's protection against blast over pressure. The helmet was then 3D printed and used for animal experiments. Chinchillas were divided into four cases (ears open, with earplug only, with both earplug and helmet, and with helmet only) and exposed to three blasts at blast over pressure of 15 to 20 psi. Hearing function tests (e.g., auditory brainstem response) were performed before and after blast on Day 1 and Days 4 and 7 after blasts.
The FE model simulation showed a significant reduction in intracranial stress with the helmet, and the animal results indicated that both earplug and helmet reduced the severity of blast-induced auditory injuries by approximately 20 dB but with different mechanisms.
The biomechanical modeling and animal experiments demonstrated that this four-case study in chinchillas with helmet and hearing protection devices provides a novel methodology to investigate the blast-induced damage in the PAS and CAS.
重复的爆炸暴露会导致外周听觉系统(PAS)和中枢听觉系统(CAS)的结构损伤。然而,很难区分两种不同途径的损伤:通过耳朵传播的爆炸压力波对 PAS 造成的机械损伤,以及爆炸波对头部或创伤性脑损伤造成的 CAS 损伤。本文报道了一项初步研究,使用 3D 打印的沙鼠“头盔”作为头部保护装置,与听力保护装置(例如耳塞)一起使用,以在重复爆炸暴露下将 CAS 损伤与 PAS 损伤隔离开来。
根据沙鼠头骨的微计算机断层扫描图像创建了沙鼠头盔的有限元(FE)模型,并将其输入 ANSYS 进行 FE 分析,以评估头盔对爆炸超压的保护作用。然后,使用 3D 打印技术制作头盔并进行动物实验。将沙鼠分为四组(耳朵开放、仅戴耳塞、同时戴耳塞和头盔、仅戴头盔),并在爆炸超压为 15 至 20 磅/平方英寸的情况下暴露于三次爆炸中。在爆炸前、爆炸后第 1 天以及第 4 天和第 7 天进行听力功能测试(例如,听觉脑干反应)。
FE 模型模拟显示,头盔可显著降低颅内压力,动物实验结果表明,耳塞和头盔均可将爆炸引起的听觉损伤的严重程度降低约 20dB,但作用机制不同。
生物力学建模和动物实验表明,这项针对佩戴头盔和听力保护装置的沙鼠的四案例研究提供了一种新的方法,可用于研究 PAS 和 CAS 中的爆炸损伤。