Protection from brain injury: the relative significance of translational and rotational motions of the head after impact.

Author(s)
Hirsch, A.E. & A.K.Ommaya.
Year
Abstract

The rotational and translation rigid body motions of the head after impact were evaluated by high-speed cinematography in Rhesus monkeys with and without a cervical collar. When a collar was worn, animals displayed increased tolerance to occipital impact for the onset of cerebral concussion. Although head rotations were reduced in this non-concussed protected group, translational motion of the head exceeded that attained by concussed monkeys not wearing collars but struck at equivalent impulse levels. These data emphasize the inadequacy of current head impact tolerance criteria which relate the occurrence of brain injury to translational head motions.

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Publication

Library number
A 8957 (In: A 8952 S [electronic version only]) IRRD 60544
Source

In: Proceedings of the 14th Stapp Car Crash Conference held at University of Michigan, November 17-18, 1970, p. 144-151; SAE paper 700899

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