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Tensile Mechanical Properties of the Perinatal and Pediatric PMHS Osteoligamentous Cervical Spine

Publication ,  Conference
Luck, JF; Nightingale, RW; Loyd, AM; Prange, MT; Dibb, AT; Song, Y; Fronheiser, L; Myers, BS
Published in: SAE Technical Papers
November 3, 2008

Pediatric cervical spine biomechanics have been under-researched due to the limited availability of pediatric post-mortem human subjects (PMHS). Scaled data based on human adult and juvenile animal studies have been utilized to augment the limited pediatric PMHS data that exists. Despite these efforts, a significant void in pediatric cervical spine biomechanics remains. Eighteen PMHS osteoligamentous head-neck complexes ranging in age from 20 weeks gestational to 14 years were tested in tension. The tests were initially conducted on the whole cervical spine and then the spines were sectioned into three segments that included two lower cervical spine segments (C4-C5 and C6-C7) and one upper cervical spine segment (O-C2). After non-destructive tests were conducted, each segment was failed in tension. The tensile stiffness of the whole spines ranged from 5.3 to 70.1 N/mm. The perinatal and neonatal specimens had an ultimate strength for the upper cervical spine of 230.9 ± 38.0 N and for the lower cervical spine of 212.8 ± 60.9 and 187.1 ± 39.4 N for the C4-C5 and C6-C7 segments, respectively. The lower cervical segments were significantly weaker and stiffer than the upper cervical spine segments in the older cohort. For the entire cohort of specimens, the stiffness of the upper cervical spine ranged from 7.1 to 199.0 N/mm. The tolerance ranged from 173.6 to 2960 N for the upper cervical spine and from 142 to 1757 N for the lower. There was a statistically significant increase in stiffness and strength with age. The results also suggest that juvenile animal surrogates estimate the stiffness of the human cervical spine fairly well; however, they may not provide accurate estimates of pediatric cervical spine strength.

Duke Scholars

Published In

SAE Technical Papers

DOI

EISSN

0148-7191

Publication Date

November 3, 2008

Volume

2008-November

Issue

November

Related Subject Headings

  • 0910 Manufacturing Engineering
  • 0902 Automotive Engineering
 

Citation

APA
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MLA
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Luck, J. F., Nightingale, R. W., Loyd, A. M., Prange, M. T., Dibb, A. T., Song, Y., … Myers, B. S. (2008). Tensile Mechanical Properties of the Perinatal and Pediatric PMHS Osteoligamentous Cervical Spine. In SAE Technical Papers (Vol. 2008-November). https://doi.org/10.4271/2008-22-0005
Luck, J. F., R. W. Nightingale, A. M. Loyd, M. T. Prange, A. T. Dibb, Y. Song, L. Fronheiser, and B. S. Myers. “Tensile Mechanical Properties of the Perinatal and Pediatric PMHS Osteoligamentous Cervical Spine.” In SAE Technical Papers, Vol. 2008-November, 2008. https://doi.org/10.4271/2008-22-0005.
Luck JF, Nightingale RW, Loyd AM, Prange MT, Dibb AT, Song Y, et al. Tensile Mechanical Properties of the Perinatal and Pediatric PMHS Osteoligamentous Cervical Spine. In: SAE Technical Papers. 2008.
Luck, J. F., et al. “Tensile Mechanical Properties of the Perinatal and Pediatric PMHS Osteoligamentous Cervical Spine.” SAE Technical Papers, vol. 2008-November, no. November, 2008. Scopus, doi:10.4271/2008-22-0005.
Luck JF, Nightingale RW, Loyd AM, Prange MT, Dibb AT, Song Y, Fronheiser L, Myers BS. Tensile Mechanical Properties of the Perinatal and Pediatric PMHS Osteoligamentous Cervical Spine. SAE Technical Papers. 2008.

Published In

SAE Technical Papers

DOI

EISSN

0148-7191

Publication Date

November 3, 2008

Volume

2008-November

Issue

November

Related Subject Headings

  • 0910 Manufacturing Engineering
  • 0902 Automotive Engineering