| Literature DB >> 25478695 |
Christopher W Pearce1, Philippe G Young1.
Abstract
When the head is subject to non-penetrating (blunt) impact, contusion-type injuries are commonly identified beneath the impact site (the coup) and, in some instances, at the opposite pole (the contre-coup). This pattern of injury has long eluded satisfactory explanation and blunt head injury mechanisms in general remain poorly understood. There are only a small number of studies in the open literature investigating the head's response to short duration impacts, which can occur in collisions with light projectiles. As such, the head impact literature to date has focussed almost exclusively on impact scenarios which lead to a quasi-static pressure response in the brain. In order to investigate the response of the head to a wide range of impact durations, parametric numerical studies were performed on a highly bio-fidelic finite element model of the human head created from in vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan data with non-linear tissue material properties. We demonstrate that short duration head impacts can lead to potentially deleterious transients of positive and negative intra-cranial pressure over an order of magnitude larger than those observed in the quasi-static regime despite reduced impact force and energy. The onset of this phenomenon is shown to be effectively predicted by the ratio of impact duration to the period of oscillation of the first ovalling mode of the system. These findings point to dramatically different pressure distributions in the brain and hence different patterns of injury depending on projectile mass, and provide a potential explanation for dual coup/contre-coup injuries observed clinically.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25478695 PMCID: PMC4257587 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0114292
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Image-based finite element model of the human head and neck.
(A) Volume rendered image of MRI scan data used to construct this model. (B) Finite element head model subject to an example simulated golf ball impact at head posterior. (C) Isometric section view of model revealing soft and hard tissue structures. (D) Enlarged view of mesh at the occipital region of the head.
Constitutive models by biological structure.
| Structure | Material formulation | Material constants | Additional information |
| Grey Matter, White Matter, Cerebellum, Brain Stem | viscoelastic |
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| Skull, Vertebrae | elastic |
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| Intervertebral Discs | elastic |
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| Cerebrospinal Fluid, Ventricles | elastic fluid |
| zero shear resistance |
| Scalp, Flesh | elastic |
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| Scalp at impact site (non-linear) | user defined stress-strain relation |
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| Impactor | elastic |
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Table of material properties assigned to the segmented structures of the head model: grey matter, white matter, cerebellum and brain stem are assigned viscoelastic properties using the standard Flügge model [24]. The cerebrospinal fluid is represented by an inviscid fluid similar to water. The scalp is modelled as a non-linear solid, with a complete stress-strain curve as obtained from published impact tests [23]. The skull, mandible, cervical vertebrae and intervertebral discs are assigned linear elastic material properties.
Results of parametric study.
| Case number | Contact duration | Peak impact force | Pressure at | Pressure at | ||
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| 1 | 3.287 | 0.470 | 1.230e-2 | −1.830e-3 | 2.771e-4 | −1.197e-2 |
| 2 | 1.681 | 0.873 | 2.540e-2 | −5.830e-3 | 1.390e-3 | −2.151e-2 |
| 3 | 1.076 | 0.957 | 3.420e-2 | −1.940e-2 | 7.555e-3 | −2.435e-2 |
| 4 | 0.786 | 0.975 | 5.510e-2 | −2.290e-2 | 7.048e-3 | −3.087e-2 |
| 5 | 0.620 | 0.978 | 1.003e-1 | −5.790e-2 | 3.174e-2 | −3.720e-2 |
| 6 | 0.504 | 0.976 | 1.257e-1 | −8.770e-2 | 5.690e-2 | −4.560e-2 |
| 7 | 0.432 | 0.977 | 1.253e-1 | −1.130e-1 | 5.800e-2 | −6.892e-2 |
| 8 | 0.371 | 0.976 | 1.500e-1 | −1.320e-1 | 6.360e-2 | −8.739e-2 |
| 9 | 0.329 | 0.975 | 1.730e-1 | −1.455e-1 | 7.698e-2 | −9.756e-2 |
| 10 | 0.295 | 0.974 | 1.960e-1 | −1.860e-1 | 8.583e-2 | −1.170e-1 |
| 11 | 0.208 | 0.968 | 2.860e-1 | −3.535e-1 | 1.014e-1 | −1.609e-1 |
| 12 | 0.169 | 0.960 | 3.480e-1 | −4.730e-1 | 1.036e-1 | −1.643e-1 |
Impact conditions, and resulting peak positive and negative pressures recorded at both coup and contre-coup using the image-based, finite element model of the skull and cranial contents.
Figure 2Intra-cranial pressure-time histories and distributions.
Pressure-time histories at the coup (red lines) and contre-coup (blue lines) for impacts with different mass projectiles, and contour plots captured at different instants in each case. (A) Impact with heavy projectile (14.0 kg at 7.3 m/s; impact energy E = 127.4 J): a quasi-static pressure-time history is observed. (B) Impact with golf ball (44.4 g at 76 m/s; identical impact energy as heavy projectile E = 127.4 J): dynamic pressure-time history observed at coup and contre-coup. (C) Impact with light fragment (10.0 g also at 76 m/s; impact energy E = 28.8 J): again dynamic pressure-time history is observed.
Figure 3Normalised peak positive and negative intra-cranial pressures.
(A) Non-dimensionalised pressures against non-dimensionalised impact durations at the coup, and (B) at the contre-coup. Solid lines represent results of the parametric study conducted using the simpler two-phase head model, and bold markers represent three case studies utilising the full bio-fidelic model.