Anatomical Features and Material Properties of Human Surrogate Head Models Affect Spatial and Temporal Brain Motion under Blunt Impact

Author:

Hanna Michael1,Ali Abdus1,Bhatambarekar Prasad1,Modi Karan1,Lee Changhee2ORCID,Morrison Barclay2,Klienberger Michael3,Pfister Bryan J.1

Affiliation:

1. Center for Injury Biomechanics, Materials and Medicine, Department of Biomedical Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ 07102, USA

2. Neurotrauma and Repair Laboratory, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA

3. The Army Research Laboratory, Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Aberdeen, MD 21005, USA

Abstract

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.

Funder

U.S. Army Research Laboratory

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference109 articles.

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