Literature DB >> 32250951

Predictions of neonatal porcine bridging vein rupture and extra-axial hemorrhage during rapid head rotations.

Stephanie A Pasquesi1, Morteza Seidi2, Marzieh Hajiaghamemar2, Susan S Margulies3.   

Abstract

When the head is rotated rapidly, the movement of the brain lags that of the skull. Intracranial contents between the brain and skull include meninges, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and cerebral vasculature. Among the cerebral vasculature in this space are the parasagittal bridging veins (BVs), which drain blood from the brain into the superior sagittal sinus (SSS), which is housed within the falx cerebri, adhered to the inner surface of the skull. Differential motion between the brain and skull that may occur during a traumatic event is thought to stretch BVs, causing damage and producing extra-axial hemorrhage (EAH). Finite element (FE) modeling is a technique often used to aid in the understanding and prediction of traumatic brain injury (TBI), and estimation of tissue deformation during traumatic events provides insight into kinematic injury thresholds. Using a FE model of the newborn porcine head with neonatal porcine brain and BV properties, single and cyclic rapid head rotations without impact were simulated. Measured BV failure properties were used to predict BV rupture. By comparing simulation outputs to observations of EAH in a development group of in vivo studies of rapid non-impact head rotations in the piglet, it was determined that failure of 16.7% of BV elements was associated with a 50% risk of EAH, and showed in a separate validation group that this threshold predicted the occurrence of EAH with 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity for single rapid non-impact rotations. This threshold for failed BV elements performed with 90% overall correct prediction in simulations of cyclic rotational head injuries. A 50% risk of EAH was associated with head angular velocities of 94.74 rad/s and angular accelerations of 29.60 krad/s2 in the newborn piglet. Future studies may build on these findings for BV failure in the piglet to develop predictive models for BV failure in human infants.
Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Abusive head trauma; Bridging veins; Finite element modeling; Pediatric; Subdural hemorrhage; Traumatic brain injury

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32250951      PMCID: PMC7228785          DOI: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2020.103740

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mech Behav Biomed Mater        ISSN: 1878-0180


  29 in total

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Authors:  Stephanie A Pasquesi; Susan S Margulies
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Authors:  Brittany Coats; Gil Binenbaum; Colin Smith; Robert L Peiffer; Cindy W Christian; Ann-Christine Duhaime; Susan S Margulies
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Authors:  Xiaogai Li; Håkan Sandler; Svein Kleiven
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Authors:  Marzieh Hajiaghamemar; Ingrid S Lan; Cindy W Christian; Brittany Coats; Susan S Margulies
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Authors:  Siamak Farajzadeh Khosroshahi; Xianzhen Yin; Cornelius K Donat; Aisling McGarry; Maria Yanez Lopez; Nicoleta Baxan; David J Sharp; Magdalena Sastre; Mazdak Ghajari
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2.  Violent Infant Surrogate Shaking: Continuous High-Magnitude Centripetal Force and Abrupt Shift in Tangential Acceleration May Explain High Risk of Subdural Hemorrhage.

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