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Dynamic Response and Residual Helmet Liner Crush Using Cadaver Heads and Standard Headforms

Overview
Journal Ann Biomed Eng
Date 2016 Aug 25
PMID 27554673
Citations 3
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Abstract

Biomechanical headforms are used for helmet certification testing and reconstructing helmeted head impacts; however, their biofidelity and direct applicability to human head and helmet responses remain unclear. Dynamic responses of cadaver heads and three headforms and residual foam liner deformations were compared during motorcycle helmet impacts. Instrumented, helmeted heads/headforms were dropped onto the forehead region against an instrumented flat anvil at 75, 150, and 195 J. Helmets were CT scanned to quantify maximum liner crush depth and crush volume. General linear models were used to quantify the effect of head type and impact energy on linear acceleration, head injury criterion (HIC), force, maximum liner crush depth, and liner crush volume and regression models were used to quantify the relationship between acceleration and both maximum crush depth and crush volume. The cadaver heads generated larger peak accelerations than all three headforms, larger HICs than the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), larger forces than the Hybrid III and ISO, larger maximum crush depth than the ISO, and larger crush volumes than the DOT. These significant differences between the cadaver heads and headforms need to be accounted for when attempting to estimate an impact exposure using a helmet's residual crush depth or volume.

Citing Articles

In-Depth Bicycle Collision Reconstruction: From a Crash Helmet to Brain Injury Evaluation.

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PMID: 36978708 PMC: 10045787. DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering10030317.


Oblique impact responses of Hybrid III and a new headform with more biofidelic coefficient of friction and moments of inertia.

Yu X, Halldin P, Ghajari M Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 2022; 10:860435.

PMID: 36159665 PMC: 9492997. DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2022.860435.


Mechanical Characterization of Synthetic Gels for Creation of Surrogate Hands Subjected to Low-Velocity Impacts.

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