Biomechanics of Blast TBI With Time-Resolved Consecutive Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary Loads

Author:

Przekwas Andrzej1,Garimella Harsha T1,Tan X Gary2,Chen Z J1,Miao Yuyang1,Harrand Vincent1,Kraft Reuben H3,Gupta Raj K4

Affiliation:

1. CFD Research Corp., 701 McMillan Way NW, Huntsville, AL

2. US Naval Research Laboratory, 4555 Overlook Ave., Washington, DC

3. Pennsylvania State University, 320 Leonhard Building, University Park, PA

4. DoD Blast Program Coordinating Office, US Army MRMC, 504 Scott Street, Fort Detrick, MD

Abstract

Abstract Blast-induced traumatic brain injury (bTBI) has become a signature casualty of recent military operations. In spite of significant clinical and preclinical TBI research, current understanding of injury mechanisms and short- and long-term outcomes is limited. Mathematical models of bTBI biomechanics may help in better understanding of injury mechanisms and in the development of improved neuroprotective strategies. Until present, bTBI has been analyzed as a single event of a blast pressure wave propagating through the brain. In many bTBI events, the loads on the body and the head are spatially and temporarily distributed, involving the primary intracranial pressure wave, followed by the head rotation and then by head impact on the ground. In such cases, the brain microstructures may experience time/space distributed (consecutive) damage and recovery events. The paper presents a novel multiscale simulation framework that couples the body/brain scale biomechanics with micro-scale mechanobiology to study the effects of micro-damage to neuro-axonal structures. Our results show that the micro-mechanical responses of neuro-axonal structures occur sequentially in time with “damage” and “relaxation” periods in different parts of the brain. A new integrated computational framework is described coupling the brain-scale biomechanics with micro-mechanical damage to axonal and synaptic structures.

Funder

US Army

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

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