Medical College of Wisconsin
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Pediatric neck injury scale factors and tolerance. Biomed Sci Instrum 2001;37:435-40

Date

05/12/2001

Pubmed ID

11347431

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-0035041959 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   7 Citations

Abstract

Although significant research efforts have been made to determine the tolerance for the adult neck, relatively little research has been conducted to derive the pediatric neck injury parameters. The existing approach to determine injury for the one, three and six year old pediatric populations is based on extrapolations from the adult male and calcaneal tendon tensile data. This study addresses the scale factors for pediatric age groups using data obtained from spinal components and neck geometry. The analysis included the determination of scale factors under extension, tension, compression and flexion loading modes as a function of age. The variations in biomechanical properties of each spinal component were determined from human cadaver studies. Active spinal components were identified under each loading mode and relationships were established for each component to obtain material-based scale factors. The scale factors and resulting injury tolerance values based on spine component material properties are more appropriate than values extrapolated from the calcaneal tendon.

Author List

Kumaresan S, Yoganandan N, Pintar FA

Authors

Frank A. Pintar PhD Professor in the Biomedical Engineering department at Medical College of Wisconsin
Narayan Yoganandan PhD Professor in the Neurosurgery department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Biomechanical Phenomena
Cervical Vertebrae
Child
Child, Preschool
Humans
Infant
Intervertebral Disc
Neck
Neck Injuries
Neck Muscles
Spinal Cord
Stress, Mechanical