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      Temporal corridors of forces and moments, and injuries to pelvis-lumbar spine in vertical impact simulating underbody blast

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          Abstract

          Pelvis and lumbar spine fractures occur in falls, motor vehicle crashes, and military combat events. They are attributed to vertical impact from the pelvis to the spine. Although whole-body cadavers were exposed to this vector and injuries were reported, spinal loads were not determined. While previous studies determined injury metrics such as peak forces using isolated pelvis or spine models, they were not conducted using the combined pelvis-spine columns, thereby not accounting for the interaction between the two body regions. Earlier studies did not develop response corridors. The study objectives were to develop temporal corridors of loads at the pelvis and spine and assess clinical fracture patterns using a human cadaver model. Vertical impact loads were delivered at the pelvic end to twelve unembalmed intact pelvis-spine complexes, and pelvis forces and spinal loads (axial, shear and resultant and bending moments) were obtained. Injuries were classified using clinical assessments from post-test computed tomography scans. Spinal injuries were stable in eight and unstable in four specimens. Pelvis injuries included ring fractures in six and unilateral pelvis in three, sacrum fractures in ten, and two specimens did not sustain any injuries to the pelvis or sacrum complex. Data were grouped based on time to peak velocity, and ± one standard deviation corridors about the mean of the biomechanical metrics were developed. Time-history corridors of loads at the pelvis and spine, hitherto not reported in any study, are valuable to assess the biofidelity of anthropomorphic test devices and assist validating finite element models.

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          Most cited references50

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              The three column spine and its significance in the classification of acute thoracolumbar spinal injuries.

              F Denis (2015)
              From a retrospective study of 412 thoracolumbar injuries, the author introduces the concept of middle column or middle osteoligamentous complex between the traditionally recognized posterior ligamentous complex and the anterior longitudinal ligament. This middle column is formed by the posterior wall of the vertebral body, the posterior longitudinal ligament and posterior annulus fibrosus. The third column appears crucial, as the mode of its failure correlates both with the type of spinal fracture and with its neurological injury. Spinal injuries were subdivided into minor and major. Minor injuries are represented by fractures of transverse processes, facets, pars interarticularis, and spinous process. Major spinal injuries are classified into four different categories: compression fractures, burst fractures, seat-belt-type injuries, and fracture dislocations. These four well-recognized injuries have been studied carefully in clinical terms as well as on roentgenograms and computerized axial tomograms. They were then subdivided into subtypes demonstrating the very wide spectrums of these four entities. The correlation between the three-column system, the classification, the stability, and the therapeutic indications are presented.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Biomechanics
                Journal of Biomechanics
                Elsevier BV
                00219290
                March 2023
                March 2023
                : 150
                : 111490
                Article
                10.1016/j.jbiomech.2023.111490
                36878113
                35d7bc3f-ead1-4724-8242-f6e970e4390c
                © 2023

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

                http://www.elsevier.com/open-access/userlicense/1.0/

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