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Muscle tetanus and loading condition effects on the elastic and viscous characteristics of the thorax.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Kent, R; Bass, CR; Woods, W; Sherwood, C; Madeley, NJ; Salzar, R; Kitagawa, Y
Published in: Traffic injury prevention
December 2003

Thoracic deformation under an applied load is an established indicator of injury risk, but the force required to achieve an injurious level of deformation currently is not understood adequately. This article evaluates how two potentially important factors, loading condition and muscle tensing, affect the structural response of the dynamically loaded thorax. Structural models of two human cadaver thoraxes and two porcine thoraxes were used to quantify the effects. The human cadavers, which represent anthropometric extremes, were subjected to anterior loading from (1) a 5.1-cm-wide belt oriented diagonally (i.e., seatbelt-like loading), (2) a 15.2-cm-diameter rigid hub, and (3) a 20.3-cm-wide belt oriented laterally (i.e., a distributed load). A structural model having the mathematical formulation of a quasilinear viscoelastic material model was used to model the elastic and viscous response, with ramp-hold tests used to determine the model coefficients. The effect of thoracic musculature was assessed using similar ramp-hold tests on the porcine subjects, each with and without forced muscle contraction. Even maximally contracted thoracic musculature is shown to have a minimal effect on the response, with similar elastic and viscous characteristics exhibited by each subject regardless of muscle tone. The elastic response is shown to be approximately a factor of three stiffer for diagonal belt loading and for this distributed loading condition than for the hub loading, indicating that the response is influenced most by the particular anatomical structures that are engaged and, secondarily, by the area of load application. Specifically, shoulder involvement is shown to have a strong influence. The force relaxation is found to be pronounced, but insensitive to the loading condition, with long-time force relaxation coefficients (G( infinity )) in the range of 0.1 to 0.3. The findings of this study provide restraint-specific guidelines for the force-deflection characteristics of both physical and computational thoracic models.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Traffic injury prevention

DOI

EISSN

1538-957X

ISSN

1538-9588

Publication Date

December 2003

Volume

4

Issue

4

Start / End Page

297 / 314

Related Subject Headings

  • Weight-Bearing
  • Viscosity
  • Thoracic Injuries
  • Swine
  • Stress, Mechanical
  • Seat Belts
  • Rib Fractures
  • Muscle Contraction
  • Middle Aged
  • Male
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Kent, R., Bass, C. R., Woods, W., Sherwood, C., Madeley, N. J., Salzar, R., & Kitagawa, Y. (2003). Muscle tetanus and loading condition effects on the elastic and viscous characteristics of the thorax. Traffic Injury Prevention, 4(4), 297–314. https://doi.org/10.1080/714040488
Kent, Richard, Cameron R. Bass, William Woods, Christopher Sherwood, N. J. Madeley, Robert Salzar, and Yuichi Kitagawa. “Muscle tetanus and loading condition effects on the elastic and viscous characteristics of the thorax.Traffic Injury Prevention 4, no. 4 (December 2003): 297–314. https://doi.org/10.1080/714040488.
Kent R, Bass CR, Woods W, Sherwood C, Madeley NJ, Salzar R, et al. Muscle tetanus and loading condition effects on the elastic and viscous characteristics of the thorax. Traffic injury prevention. 2003 Dec;4(4):297–314.
Kent, Richard, et al. “Muscle tetanus and loading condition effects on the elastic and viscous characteristics of the thorax.Traffic Injury Prevention, vol. 4, no. 4, Dec. 2003, pp. 297–314. Epmc, doi:10.1080/714040488.
Kent R, Bass CR, Woods W, Sherwood C, Madeley NJ, Salzar R, Kitagawa Y. Muscle tetanus and loading condition effects on the elastic and viscous characteristics of the thorax. Traffic injury prevention. 2003 Dec;4(4):297–314.

Published In

Traffic injury prevention

DOI

EISSN

1538-957X

ISSN

1538-9588

Publication Date

December 2003

Volume

4

Issue

4

Start / End Page

297 / 314

Related Subject Headings

  • Weight-Bearing
  • Viscosity
  • Thoracic Injuries
  • Swine
  • Stress, Mechanical
  • Seat Belts
  • Rib Fractures
  • Muscle Contraction
  • Middle Aged
  • Male