A human surrogate neck for traumatic brain injury research

Properties of the human neck such as range and resistance to motion are considered important determinants of the kinematic response of the head pre, during and post-impact. Mechanical surrogate necks (i.e., anthropomorphic test device necks), have generally been limited to a single anatomical plane...

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Main Authors: Jonathan Farmer, Sean Mitchell, Paul Sherratt, Yusuke Miyazaki
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Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/21731927.v1
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spelling rr-article-217319272022-12-19T00:00:00Z A human surrogate neck for traumatic brain injury research Jonathan Farmer (1258620) Sean Mitchell (1249317) Paul Sherratt (1253103) Yusuke Miyazaki (2106496) Other biological sciences Medical biotechnology Biomedical engineering Anthropomorphic test device (ATD) neck biomechanics bio inspired cervical spine biofidelic <p>Properties of the human neck such as range and resistance to motion are considered important determinants of the kinematic response of the head pre, during and post-impact. Mechanical surrogate necks (i.e., anthropomorphic test device necks), have generally been limited to a single anatomical plane of motion and an artificially high resistance to motion. The aim of this study was to present the Loughborough University Surrogate Neck that is representative of the 50th percentile human male neck, developed for motion in and between each of the anatomical planes with inertial and flexural stiffness properties matching those of a passive elastic (i.e., negligible active tension) neck muscle state. The complex intervertebral joints were reduced to three encapsulated ball joints with appropriate locations, orientations and distributed range of motion to precisely position and orientate the head with respect to the torso at the neutral position and end range of motion. A plain bearing sub-assembly was incorporated at the C1-C2 vertebral level to permit 50% of the axial rotation with negligible resistance to motion, as exhibited by humans. Detachable elastomeric elements provided resistance to motion across each ball joint and permit any orientation of the head within the physiological range of motion of the joints. The mass of the surrogate neck (1.62 Kg) was in agreement with the typical human range and similar agreement was found for the principal moments of inertia (Ixx 26.8 kg.cm2, Iyy 20.5 kg.cm2 and Izz 14.3 kg.cm2). Quasi-static bending moment and dynamic torque tests characterised the surrogate neck in flexion/extension, lateral flexion and axial rotation. With respect to commercial surrogate necks, the surrogate neck presented here was in closer agreement to the reported human responses, for equivalent loading conditions. The applications of a surrogate neck that can appropriately constrain the head relative to the torso are far reaching in the areas of brain injury mechanism research, and for the development and assessment of protective equipment to reduce the risk of such injuries. </p> 2022-12-19T00:00:00Z Text Journal contribution 2134/21731927.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/A_human_surrogate_neck_for_traumatic_brain_injury_research/21731927 CC BY 4.0
institution Loughborough University
collection Figshare
topic Other biological sciences
Medical biotechnology
Biomedical engineering
Anthropomorphic test device (ATD)
neck biomechanics
bio inspired
cervical spine
biofidelic
spellingShingle Other biological sciences
Medical biotechnology
Biomedical engineering
Anthropomorphic test device (ATD)
neck biomechanics
bio inspired
cervical spine
biofidelic
Jonathan Farmer
Sean Mitchell
Paul Sherratt
Yusuke Miyazaki
A human surrogate neck for traumatic brain injury research
description Properties of the human neck such as range and resistance to motion are considered important determinants of the kinematic response of the head pre, during and post-impact. Mechanical surrogate necks (i.e., anthropomorphic test device necks), have generally been limited to a single anatomical plane of motion and an artificially high resistance to motion. The aim of this study was to present the Loughborough University Surrogate Neck that is representative of the 50th percentile human male neck, developed for motion in and between each of the anatomical planes with inertial and flexural stiffness properties matching those of a passive elastic (i.e., negligible active tension) neck muscle state. The complex intervertebral joints were reduced to three encapsulated ball joints with appropriate locations, orientations and distributed range of motion to precisely position and orientate the head with respect to the torso at the neutral position and end range of motion. A plain bearing sub-assembly was incorporated at the C1-C2 vertebral level to permit 50% of the axial rotation with negligible resistance to motion, as exhibited by humans. Detachable elastomeric elements provided resistance to motion across each ball joint and permit any orientation of the head within the physiological range of motion of the joints. The mass of the surrogate neck (1.62 Kg) was in agreement with the typical human range and similar agreement was found for the principal moments of inertia (Ixx 26.8 kg.cm2, Iyy 20.5 kg.cm2 and Izz 14.3 kg.cm2). Quasi-static bending moment and dynamic torque tests characterised the surrogate neck in flexion/extension, lateral flexion and axial rotation. With respect to commercial surrogate necks, the surrogate neck presented here was in closer agreement to the reported human responses, for equivalent loading conditions. The applications of a surrogate neck that can appropriately constrain the head relative to the torso are far reaching in the areas of brain injury mechanism research, and for the development and assessment of protective equipment to reduce the risk of such injuries. 
format Default
Article
author Jonathan Farmer
Sean Mitchell
Paul Sherratt
Yusuke Miyazaki
author_facet Jonathan Farmer
Sean Mitchell
Paul Sherratt
Yusuke Miyazaki
author_sort Jonathan Farmer (1258620)
title A human surrogate neck for traumatic brain injury research
title_short A human surrogate neck for traumatic brain injury research
title_full A human surrogate neck for traumatic brain injury research
title_fullStr A human surrogate neck for traumatic brain injury research
title_full_unstemmed A human surrogate neck for traumatic brain injury research
title_sort human surrogate neck for traumatic brain injury research
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/21731927.v1
_version_ 1797457197297303552