School of Civil Engineering and Transportation, State Key Laboratory of Subtropical Building and Urban Science, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510640, China.
School of Civil Engineering and Transportation, State Key Laboratory of Subtropical Building and Urban Science, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510640, China.
Injury. 2024 Aug;55(8):111658. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2024.111658. Epub 2024 Jun 11.
Accidental impact on a player's head by a powerful soccer ball may lead to brain injuries and concussions during games. It is crucial to assess these injuries promptly and accurately on the field. However, it is challenging for referees, coaches, and even players themselves to accurately recognize potential injuries and concussions following such impacts. Therefore, it is necessary to establish a list of minimum ball velocity thresholds that can result in concussions at different impact locations on the head. Additionally, it is important to identify the affected brain regions responsible for impairments in brain function and potential clinical symptoms.
By using a full human finite element model, dynamic responses and brain injuries caused by unintentional soccer ball impacts on six distinct head locations (forehead, tempus, crown, occiput, face, and jaw) at varying ball velocities (10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, and 60 m/s) were simulated and investigated. Intracranial pressure, Von-Mises stress, and first principal strain were analyzed, the ball velocity thresholds resulting in concussions at different impact locations were evaluated, and the damage evolution patterns in the brain tissue were analyzed.
The impact on the occiput is most susceptible to induce brain injuries compared to all other impact locations. For a conservative assessment, the risk of concussion is present once the soccer ball reaches 17.2 m/s in a frontal impact, 16.6 m/s in a parietal impact, 14.0 m/s in an occipital impact, 17.8 m/s in a temporal impact, 18.5 m/s in a facial impact or 19.2 m/s in a mandibular impact. The brain exhibits the most significant dynamic responses during the initial 10-20 ms, and the damaged regions are primarily concentrated in the medial temporal lobe and the corpus callosum, potentially causing impairments in brain functions.
This work offers a framework for quantitatively assessing brain injuries and concussions induced by an unintentional soccer ball impact. Determining the ball velocity thresholds at various impact locations provides a benchmark for evaluating the risks of concussion. The examination of brain tissue damage evolution introduces a novel approach to linking biomechanical responses with possible clinical symptoms.
球员头部被强力足球意外撞击可能导致比赛中脑损伤和脑震荡。在场上及时准确地评估这些损伤至关重要。然而,裁判员、教练,甚至球员自己都难以准确识别此类撞击后的潜在损伤和脑震荡。因此,有必要建立一个最小球速阈值列表,以确定头部不同撞击位置导致脑震荡的情况。此外,确定负责脑功能障碍和潜在临床症状的受影响脑区也很重要。
使用全人类有限元模型,模拟并研究了 6 个不同头部位置(前额、颞部、头顶、枕部、面部和下颌)在不同球速(10、15、20、25、30、35、40 和 60 m/s)下,非故意足球撞击引起的动态响应和脑损伤。分析了颅内压、冯米塞斯应力和第一主应变,评估了不同撞击位置导致脑震荡的球速阈值,并分析了脑组织的损伤演变模式。
与其他所有撞击位置相比,枕部撞击最容易引起脑损伤。为了保守评估,一旦足球在正面撞击中达到 17.2 m/s,在顶骨撞击中达到 16.6 m/s,在枕部撞击中达到 14.0 m/s,在颞部撞击中达到 17.8 m/s,在面部撞击中达到 18.5 m/s,在下颌撞击中达到 19.2 m/s,就存在脑震荡的风险。大脑在最初的 10-20 ms 内表现出最显著的动态响应,受损区域主要集中在内侧颞叶和胼胝体,可能导致脑功能障碍。
这项工作为定量评估非故意足球撞击引起的脑损伤和脑震荡提供了一个框架。确定不同撞击位置的球速阈值为评估脑震荡风险提供了基准。研究脑组织损伤演变引入了一种将生物力学响应与可能的临床症状联系起来的新方法。