Literature DB >> 26130519

Fantastic plastic? Experimental evaluation of polyurethane bone substitutes as proxies for human bone in trauma simulations.

Martin J Smith1, Stephen James2, Tim Pover3, Nina Ball4, Victoria Barnetson4, Bethany Foster4, Carl Guy4, John Rickman4, Virginia Walton4.   

Abstract

Recent years have seen steady improvements in the recognition and interpretation of violence related injuries in human skeletal remains. Such work has at times benefited from the involvement of biological anthropologists in forensic casework and has often relied upon comparison of documented examples with trauma observed in skeletal remains. In cases where no such example exists investigators must turn to experimentation. The selection of experimental samples is problematic as animal proxies may be too dissimilar to humans and human cadavers may be undesirable for a raft of reasons. The current article examines a third alternative in the form of polyurethane plates and spheres marketed as viable proxies for human bone in ballistic experiments. Through subjecting these samples to a range of impacts from both modern and archaic missile weapons it was established that such material generally responds similarly to bone on a broad, macroscopic scale but when examined in closer detail exhibits a range of dissimilarities that call for caution in extrapolating such results to real bone.
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Forensic Anthropology; Gunshot; Head injury; Synthetic bone substitutes; Trauma

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26130519     DOI: 10.1016/j.legalmed.2015.06.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Leg Med (Tokyo)        ISSN: 1344-6223            Impact factor:   1.376


  8 in total

1.  Threshold of the skull injury for blunt force impacts under free and constraint boundary conditions.

Authors:  Lea Siegenthaler; Michael Strehl; Alessio Vaghi; Philippe Zysset; Beat P Kneubuehl; Martin Frenz
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2019-03-19       Impact factor: 2.686

2.  Does preliminary optimisation of an anatomically correct skull-brain model using simple simulants produce clinically realistic ballistic injury fracture patterns?

Authors:  P F Mahoney; D J Carr; R J Delaney; N Hunt; S Harrison; J Breeze; I Gibb
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2017-03-07       Impact factor: 2.686

3.  Ballistic impacts on an anatomically correct synthetic skull with a surrogate skin/soft tissue layer.

Authors:  Peter Mahoney; Debra Carr; Richard Arm; Iain Gibb; Nicholas Hunt; Russ J Delaney
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2017-11-28       Impact factor: 2.686

4.  Forensic reconstruction of two military combat related shooting incidents using an anatomically correct synthetic skull with a surrogate skin/soft tissue layer.

Authors:  Peter Mahoney; Debra Carr; Karl Harrison; Ruth McGuire; Alan Hepper; Daniel Flynn; Russ J Delaney; Iain Gibb
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2018-03-07       Impact factor: 2.686

5.  The ballistic performance of bone when impacted by fragments.

Authors:  A J Caister; D J Carr; P D Campbell; F Brock; J Breeze
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2020-05-02       Impact factor: 2.686

6.  Ballistic trauma caused by military rifles: experimental study based on synthetic skull proxies.

Authors:  Seth C Taylor; Benjamin Ondruschka; David C Kieser; Niels Hammer; Matthew Lee; Gary J Hooper; Elena Kranioti
Journal:  Forensic Sci Med Pathol       Date:  2022-01-01       Impact factor: 2.007

Review 7.  Ten years of molecular ballistics-a review and a field guide.

Authors:  Jan Euteneuer; Cornelius Courts
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2021-02-16       Impact factor: 2.686

8.  Assessment of polyurethane spheres as surrogates for military ballistic head injury.

Authors:  Peter Mahoney; Debra Carr; Nicholas Hunt; Russ J Delaney
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2018-03-29       Impact factor: 2.686

  8 in total

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