Literature DB >> 34142277

Whole Body PMHS Response in Injurious Experimental Accelerative Loading Events.

Jonathan D Rupp1, Lauren Zaseck2, Carl S Miller2, Anne C Bonifas2, Matthew P Reed2, Don Sherman3, John M Cavanaugh3, Kyle Ott4, Constantine K Demetropoulos4.   

Abstract

Previous studies involving whole-body post-mortem human surrogates (PHMS) have generated biomechanical response specifications for physically simulated accelerative loading intended to reproduce seat and floor velocity histories occurring in under-body blast (UBB) events (e.g.,. References 10, 11, 21 These previous studies employed loading conditions that only rarely produced injuries to the foot/ankle and pelvis, which are body regions of interest for injury assessment in staged UBB testing using anthropomorphic test devices. To investigate more injurious whole-body conditions, three series of tests were conducted with PMHS that were equipped with military personal protective equipment and seated in an upright posture. These tests used higher velocity and shorter duration floor and seat inputs than were previously used with the goal of producing pelvis and foot/ankle fractures. A total of nine PMHS that were approximately midsize in stature and mass were equally allocated across three loading conditions, including a 15.5 m/s, 2.5 ms time-to-peak (TTP) floor velocity pulse with a 10 m/s, 7.5 ms TTP seat pulse; a 13 m/s, 2.5 ms TTP floor pulse with a 9.0 m/s, 5 ms TTP seat pulse; and a 10 m/s, 2.5 ms TTP floor pulse with a 6.5 m/s, 7.5 ms TTP seat pulse. In the first two conditions, the seat was padded with a ~ 120-mm-thick foam cushion to elongate the pulse experienced by the PMHS. Of the nine PMHS tests, five resulted in pelvic ring fractures, five resulted in a total of eight foot/ankle fractures (i.e., two unilateral and three bilateral fractures), and one produced a femur fracture. Test results were used to develop corridors describing the variability in kinematics and in forces applied to the feet, forces applied to the pelvis and buttocks in rigid seat tests, and in forces applied to the seat foam in padded seat tests. These corridors and the body-region specific injury/no-injury response data can be used to assess the performance and predictive capability of anthropomorphic test devices and computational models used as human surrogates in simulated UBB testing.
© 2021. Biomedical Engineering Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anthropomorphic test device; Biofidelity; PMHS; Under-body blast; Vertical accelerative loading; WIAMan

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34142277     DOI: 10.1007/s10439-021-02803-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng        ISSN: 0090-6964            Impact factor:   3.934


  8 in total

1.  Prominent Injury Types in Vehicle Underbody Blast.

Authors:  Kathryn L Loftis; Edward L Mazuchowski; Mary C Clouser; Patrick J Gillich
Journal:  Mil Med       Date:  2019-03-01       Impact factor: 1.437

2.  The Mechanical Response and Tolerance of the Anteriorly-Tilted Human Pelvis Under Vertical Loading.

Authors:  R S Salzar; E M Spratley; K A Henderson; P C Greenhalgh; J Z Zhang; B J Perry; J A McMahon
Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  2020-09-25       Impact factor: 3.934

3.  Evaluation of the Whole Body Spine Response to Sub-Injurious Vertical Loading.

Authors:  Kyle A Ott; Constantine K Demetropoulos; Mary E Luongo; Jack M Titus; Andrew C Merkle; David G Drewry
Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  2020-10-22       Impact factor: 3.934

Review 4.  Normalizing and scaling of data to derive human response corridors from impact tests.

Authors:  Narayan Yoganandan; Mike W J Arun; Frank A Pintar
Journal:  J Biomech       Date:  2014-03-13       Impact factor: 2.712

5.  Comparison of ATD to PMHS Response in the Under-Body Blast Environment.

Authors:  Kerry A Danelson; Andrew R Kemper; Matthew J Mason; Michael Tegtmeyer; Sean A Swiatkowski; John H Bolte; Warren N Hardy
Journal:  Stapp Car Crash J       Date:  2015-11

6.  Evaluation of WIAMan Technology Demonstrator Biofidelity Relative to Sub-Injurious PMHS Response in Simulated Under-body Blast Events.

Authors:  Hollie A Pietsch; Kelly E Bosch; David R Weyland; E Meade Spratley; Kyvory A Henderson; Robert S Salzar; Terrance A Smith; Brandon M Sagara; Constantine K Demetropoulos; Christopher J Dooley; Andrew C Merkle
Journal:  Stapp Car Crash J       Date:  2016-11

7.  Sources of Variability in Structural Bending Response of Pediatric and Adult Human Ribs in Dynamic Frontal Impacts.

Authors:  Amanda M Agnew; Michelle M Murach; Victoria M Dominguez; Akshara Sreedhar; Elina Misicka; Angela Harden; John H Bolte; Yun-Seok Kang; Jason Stammen; Kevin Moorhouse
Journal:  Stapp Car Crash J       Date:  2018-11

8.  Human Foot-Ankle Injuries and Associated Risk Curves from Under Body Blast Loading Conditions.

Authors:  Sajal Chirvi; Frank Pintar; Narayan Yoganandan; Anjishnu Banerjee; Mike Schlick; William Curry; Liming Voo
Journal:  Stapp Car Crash J       Date:  2017-11
  8 in total
  1 in total

1.  Verification of High-Rate Vertical Loading Laboratory Skeletal Fractures by Comparison with Theater Injury Patterns.

Authors:  K A Danelson; J G Polich; D R Barnes; G S Bullock; A T Scott; J J Halvorson; T O'Gara; H T Pilson; S Babcock; J Birkedal; B McAllister; K L Loftis
Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  2021-10-15       Impact factor: 3.934

  1 in total

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