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Expansion and evaluation of data characterizing the structural behavior of the pediatric abdomen.

Publication ,  Conference
Lamp, JF; Salzar, R; Kerrigan, J; Parent, D; Lopez-Valdez, F; Lau, S; Lessley, D; Kent, R; Luck, J; Loyd, A; Bass, C
Published in: Annals of advances in automotive medicine. Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine. Annual Scientific Conference
January 2010

Despite the importance of abdominal injuries in children involved in motor vehicle collisions, only two papers have reported experimental data quantifying the pediatric abdominal response to belt loading. One developed and characterized a porcine model of the pediatric abdomen and the other presented a series of tests performed on a single pediatric (7-year-old female) post-mortem human subject (PMHS) and used the data to evaluate the efficacy of the porcine model. The current paper presents the results from an additional pediatric (6-year-old female) PMHS test series and an expanded evaluation of the porcine model using the combined PMHS data. The two PMHS exhibited remarkably similar abdominal stiffness, both by level (upper and lower) and by rate (quasi-static and ∼2 m/s dynamic). Both PMHS and swine exhibited the same stiffness trend by abdominal level (lower stiffer than upper: 3444 N reaction force at 30.5 mm of displacement compared to 1756 N in the 6-year-old dynamic tests). The magnitude of lower abdomen stiffness was slightly less in the swine than in the PMHS (the average dynamic PMHS response was 1086 N greater than the porcine envelopes at 30.5 mm displacement) while the upper abdomen PMHS responses fit within the porcine response envelope.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Annals of advances in automotive medicine. Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine. Annual Scientific Conference

ISSN

1943-2461

Publication Date

January 2010

Volume

54

Start / End Page

89 / 96

Related Subject Headings

  • Seat Belts
  • Humans
  • Child
  • Cadaver
  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • Animals
  • Accidents, Traffic
  • Abdominal Injuries
  • Abdominal Cavity
  • Abdomen
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Lamp, J. F., Salzar, R., Kerrigan, J., Parent, D., Lopez-Valdez, F., Lau, S., … Bass, C. (2010). Expansion and evaluation of data characterizing the structural behavior of the pediatric abdomen. In Annals of advances in automotive medicine. Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine. Annual Scientific Conference (Vol. 54, pp. 89–96).
Lamp, John F., Robert Salzar, Jason Kerrigan, Daniel Parent, Francisco Lopez-Valdez, Sabrina Lau, David Lessley, et al. “Expansion and evaluation of data characterizing the structural behavior of the pediatric abdomen.” In Annals of Advances in Automotive Medicine. Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine. Annual Scientific Conference, 54:89–96, 2010.
Lamp JF, Salzar R, Kerrigan J, Parent D, Lopez-Valdez F, Lau S, et al. Expansion and evaluation of data characterizing the structural behavior of the pediatric abdomen. In: Annals of advances in automotive medicine Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine Annual Scientific Conference. 2010. p. 89–96.
Lamp, John F., et al. “Expansion and evaluation of data characterizing the structural behavior of the pediatric abdomen.Annals of Advances in Automotive Medicine. Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine. Annual Scientific Conference, vol. 54, 2010, pp. 89–96.
Lamp JF, Salzar R, Kerrigan J, Parent D, Lopez-Valdez F, Lau S, Lessley D, Kent R, Luck J, Loyd A, Bass C. Expansion and evaluation of data characterizing the structural behavior of the pediatric abdomen. Annals of advances in automotive medicine Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine Annual Scientific Conference. 2010. p. 89–96.

Published In

Annals of advances in automotive medicine. Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine. Annual Scientific Conference

ISSN

1943-2461

Publication Date

January 2010

Volume

54

Start / End Page

89 / 96

Related Subject Headings

  • Seat Belts
  • Humans
  • Child
  • Cadaver
  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • Animals
  • Accidents, Traffic
  • Abdominal Injuries
  • Abdominal Cavity
  • Abdomen