Hanna Michael, Ali Abdus, Bhatambarekar Prasad, Modi Karan, Lee Changhee, Morrison Barclay, Klienberger Michael, Pfister Bryan J
Center for Injury Biomechanics, Materials and Medicine, Department of Biomedical Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ 07102, USA.
Neurotrauma and Repair Laboratory, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA.
Bioengineering (Basel). 2024 Jun 25;11(7):650. doi: 10.3390/bioengineering11070650.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a biomechanical problem where the initiating event is dynamic loading (blunt, inertial, blast) to the head. To understand the relationship between the mechanical parameters of the injury and the deformation patterns in the brain, we have previously developed a surrogate head (SH) model capable of measuring spatial and temporal deformation in a surrogate brain under blunt impact. The objective of this work was to examine how material properties and anatomical features affect the motion of the brain and the development of injurious deformations. The SH head model was modified to study six variables independently under blunt impact: surrogate brain stiffness, surrogate skull stiffness, inclusion of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), head/skull size, inclusion of vasculature, and neck stiffness. Each experimental SH was either crown or frontally impacted at 1.3 m/s (3 mph) using a drop tower system. Surrogate brain material, the Hybrid III neck stiffness, and skull stiffness were measured and compared to published properties. Results show that the most significant variables affecting changes in brain deformation are skull stiffness, inclusion of CSF and surrogate brain stiffness. Interestingly, neck stiffness and SH size significantly affected the strain rate only suggesting these parameters are less important in blunt trauma. While the inclusion of vasculature locally created strain concentrations at the interface of the artery and brain, overall deformation was reduced.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)是一个生物力学问题,其起始事件是头部受到动态载荷(钝性、惯性、爆炸)。为了理解损伤的力学参数与大脑变形模式之间的关系,我们之前开发了一种替代头部(SH)模型,该模型能够测量钝性撞击下替代大脑中的空间和时间变形。这项工作的目的是研究材料特性和解剖特征如何影响大脑的运动以及损伤性变形的发展。对SH头部模型进行了修改,以便在钝性撞击下独立研究六个变量:替代大脑刚度、替代颅骨刚度、脑脊液(CSF)的包含情况、头部/颅骨大小、血管系统的包含情况以及颈部刚度。每个实验性SH使用落塔系统以1.3米/秒(3英里/小时)的速度进行冠状面或正面撞击。测量了替代大脑材料、Hybrid III颈部刚度和颅骨刚度,并与已发表的特性进行了比较。结果表明,影响大脑变形变化的最显著变量是颅骨刚度、脑脊液的包含情况和替代大脑刚度。有趣的是,颈部刚度和SH大小仅显著影响应变率,这表明这些参数在钝性创伤中不太重要。虽然血管系统的包含在动脉与大脑的界面处局部产生了应变集中,但总体变形有所减少。