Load-Based Lower Neck Injury Criteria for Females from Rear Impact from Cadaver Experiments. Ann Biomed Eng 2017 May;45(5):1194-1203
Date
01/17/2017Pubmed ID
28091968DOI
10.1007/s10439-016-1773-5Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85010743438 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site) 22 CitationsAbstract
The objectives of this study were to derive lower neck injury metrics/criteria and injury risk curves for the force, moment, and interaction criterion in rear impacts for females. Biomechanical data were obtained from previous intact and isolated post mortem human subjects and head-neck complexes subjected to posteroanterior accelerative loading. Censored data were used in the survival analysis model. The primary shear force, sagittal bending moment, and interaction (lower neck injury criterion, LNic) metrics were significant predictors of injury. The most optimal distribution was selected (Weibulll, log normal, or log logistic) using the Akaike information criterion according to the latest ISO recommendations for deriving risk curves. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov test was used to quantify robustness of the assumed parametric model. The intercepts for the interaction index were extracted from the primary risk curves. Normalized confidence interval sizes (NCIS) were reported at discrete probability levels, along with the risk curves and 95% confidence intervals. The mean force of 214 N, moment of 54 Nm, and 0.89 LNic were associated with a five percent probability of injury. The NCIS for these metrics were 0.90, 0.95, and 0.85. These preliminary results can be used as a first step in the definition of lower neck injury criteria for women under posteroanterior accelerative loading in crashworthiness evaluations.
Author List
Yoganandan N, Pintar FA, Banerjee AAuthors
Anjishnu Banerjee PhD Associate Professor in the Data Science Institute department at Medical College of WisconsinFrank A. Pintar PhD Chair, 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
CadaverFemale
Humans
Models, Biological
Neck Injuries
Weight-Bearing