Prediction of cervical spine injury risk for the 6-year-old child in frontal crashes.

Author(s)
Sherwood, C.P. Shaw, C.G. Van-Rooij, L. Kent, R.W. Orzechowski, K.M. Eichelberger, M.R. & Kallieris, D.
Year
Abstract

This article presents a series of 49 km/h sled tests using the Hybrid III 6-year-old dummy in a high-back booster, a low-back booster, and a three-point belt. Although a 10-year review at a level I trauma center showed that noncontact cervical spine injuries are rare in correctly restrained booster-age children, dummy neck loads exceeded published injury thresholds in all tests. The dummy underwent extreme neck flexion during the test, causing full-face contact with the dummy's chest. These dummy kinematics were compared to the kinematics of a 12-year-old cadaver tested in a similar impact environment. The cadaver test showed neck flexion, but also significant thoracic spinal flexion which was nonexistent in the dummy. This comparison was expanded using MADYMO simulations in which the thoracic spinal stiffness of the dummy model was decreased to give a more biofidelic kinematic response. We conclude that the stiff thoracic spine of the dummy results in high neck forces and moments that are not representative of the true injury potential. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I E119259 /84 / IRRD E119259
Source

Traffic Injury Prevention. 2003 /09. 4(3) Pp206-13 (23 Refs.)

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.