Affiliation:
1. University of Waterloo, Department of Mechanical and Mechatronics
Engineering, USA
2. Origin Forensics LLC, USA
Abstract
<div>Compressive impacts on the cervical spine can result in bony fractures. Bone
fragments displaced into the spinal canal produce spinal canal occlusion,
increasing the potential for spinal cord injury (SCI). Human body models (HBMs)
provide an opportunity to investigate SCI but currently need to be improved in
their ability to model compression fractures and the resulting material flow.
Previous work to improve fracture prediction included the development of an
anisotropic material model for the bone (hard tissues) of the vertebrae assessed
in a functional spinal unit (FSU) model. In the FSU model, bony failure was
modeled with strain-based element erosion, with a limitation that material that
could occlude the spinal canal during compression was removed when an element
was eroded. The objective of this study was to implement a multi-physics
modeling approach, using smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) with element
erosion, to simulate the movement of fractured material during central
compression of a C5-C6-C7 cervical spine segment and assess spinal canal
occlusion. The calculated maximum occlusion in the original model was 11.1%. In
contrast, the enhanced model with SPH had a maximum occlusion of 79.0%, in good
agreement with the average experimental maximum occlusion of 69.0% for
age-matched specimens. The SPH implementation to preserve fractured material
volume enabled the assessment of spinal canal occlusion.</div>
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Safety Research,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality,Human Factors and Ergonomics,General Medicine