High-Rate Anisotropic Properties in Human Infant Parietal and Occipital Bone

Author:

Metcalf Robert M.1,Comstock Jessica M.2,Coats Brittany1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Utah, 1495 E 100 S (1550 MEK), Salt Lake City, UT 84112

2. Pediatric Pathology, Primary Children's Hospital, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112

Abstract

Abstract Computational models of infant head impact are limited by the paucity of infant cranial bone material property data, particularly with regard to the anisotropic relationships created by the trabecular fibers in infant bone. We previously reported high-rate material property data for human infant cranial bone tested perpendicular to trabeculae fiber orientation. In this study, we measure the anisotropic properties of human infant cranial bone by analyzing bending modulus parallel to the trabeculae fibers. We tested human bone specimens from nine donors ranging in age from 32 weeks gestational age to 10 months at strain rates of 12.3−30.1 s−1. Bending modulus significantly increased with donor age (p=0.008) and was 13.4 times greater along the fiber direction compared to perpendicular to the fibers. Ultimate stress was greater by 5.1 times when tested parallel to the fibers compared to perpendicular (p=0.067). Parietal bone had a higher modulus and ultimate stress compared to occipital bone, but this trend was not significant, as previously shown perpendicular to fiber orientation. Combined, these data suggest that the pediatric skull is highly age-dependent, anisotropic, and regionally dependent. The incorporation of these characteristics in finite element models of infant head impact will be necessary to advance pediatric head injury research and further our understanding of the mechanisms of head injury in children.

Funder

National Institute of Justice

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

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