Chauvet Robert, Martin Ashton, Rovt Jennifer, Petel Oren, Ouellet Simon, Westover Lindsey, Dennison Christopher R
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Alberta, 116 St and 85 Ave, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2R3, Canada.
Biomedical Instrumentation Lab, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
Ann Biomed Eng. 2025 May;53(5):1226-1246. doi: 10.1007/s10439-024-03652-4. Epub 2025 Mar 8.
Physical surrogates of the human head are commonly used to model cranial impacts, assess helmet efficacy and assess likelihood of head injuries. The Brain Injury Protection Evaluation Device (BIPED mk2) is a head form that contains a brain simulant, cerebrospinal fluid layer (CSF), connective membranes, a skull and a skin layer, and can be configured to measure kinematics, pressures and strains. In design efforts to increase the biofidelity of surrogates, finite element models play a significant role in assessing design iterations that better mimic the biological response of the head during impact. This study aims to create a digital model of the BIPED mk2 and provide a robust comparison to experimental pressure and strain data, measured from specific impact scenarios. Kinematics from two separate frontal impact experiment campaigns were used to drive the BIPED mk2 finite element model. In the first experiments, brain pressure was extracted from in situ transducers. In the second, brain strain was extracted from post hoc imagery analysis. These pressure and strain data are the basis on which we verify the pressures and strains reported from the finite element model. Pressure and displacement time series responses were compared with experimental data using a CORrelation Analysis (CORA). The average CORA rating for pressure measurements taken at the front brain sensor was 0.701 using the kinematic model inputs and 0.851 for the force model inputs. For the rear brain sensor, the signals were deemed poor fits as the average CORA scores were 0.442 for the kinematic input and 0.255 for the force input. CORA ratings for the comparison of displacement data in the x (anterior-posterior) and z (superior-inferior) directions of the 18 nodes tested resulted in a range of values from 0.012 to 0.936. The results matched best in the interior but were poor along the perimeter of the brain depending on the location of the point in relation to the brain surface. We speculate the mixed findings are due in large part to the simplified CSF model, a potential focus for future model refinement.
人体头部的物理替代物通常用于模拟颅骨撞击、评估头盔功效以及评估头部受伤的可能性。脑损伤保护评估装置(BIPED mk2)是一种头部模型,它包含脑模拟物、脑脊液层(CSF)、结缔组织膜、颅骨和皮肤层,并且可以配置为测量运动学、压力和应变。在提高替代物生物逼真度的设计工作中,有限元模型在评估设计迭代方面发挥着重要作用,这些设计迭代能更好地模拟头部在撞击过程中的生物反应。本研究旨在创建BIPED mk2的数字模型,并与从特定撞击场景测量得到的实验压力和应变数据进行有力比较。来自两个独立的正面撞击实验活动的运动学数据被用于驱动BIPED mk2有限元模型。在第一个实验中,通过原位传感器提取脑压力。在第二个实验中,通过事后图像分析提取脑应变。这些压力和应变数据是我们验证有限元模型报告的压力和应变的基础。使用相关性分析(CORA)将压力和位移时间序列响应与实验数据进行比较。使用运动学模型输入时,在前脑传感器处进行的压力测量的平均CORA评级为0.701,使用力模型输入时为0.851。对于后脑传感器,信号被认为拟合不佳,因为运动学输入的平均CORA分数为0.442,力输入的平均CORA分数为0.255。对测试的18个节点在x(前后)和z(上下)方向上的位移数据进行比较的CORA评级产生了从0.012到0.936的一系列值。结果在脑内部匹配最佳,但根据点相对于脑表面的位置,在脑周边处较差。我们推测这些混合结果在很大程度上是由于脑脊液模型简化所致,这是未来模型改进的一个潜在重点。