Abstract PurposeThis study aimed to investigate the role of neck muscle activity and neck damping characteristics in traumatic brain injury (TBI) mechanisms. MethodsWe used a previously validated head-neck finite element (FE) model that incorporates various components such as scalp, skull, cerebrospinal fluid, brain, muscles, ligaments, cervical vertebrae, and intervertebral discs. Impact scenarios included a Golf ball impact, NBDL linear acceleration, and Zhang’s linear and rotational accelerations. Three muscle activation strategies (no-activation, low-to-medium, and high activation levels) and two neck damping levels by perturbing intervertebral disc properties (high: hyper-viscoelastic and low: hyper-elastic) strategies were examined. We employed Head Injury Criterion (HIC), Brain Injury Criterion (BrIC), and maximum principal strain (MPS) as TBI measures. ResultsIncreased neck muscle activation consistently reduced the values of all TBI measures in Golf ball impact (HIC: 4%-7%, BrIC: 11%-25%, and MPS (occipital): 27%-50%) and NBDL study (HIC: 64%-69%, BrIC: 3%-9%, and MPS (occipital): 6%-19%) simulations. In Zhang’s study, TBI metric values decreased with the increased muscle activation from no-activation to low-to-medium (HIC: 74%-83%, BrIC: 27%-27%, and MPS (occipital): 60%-90%) and then drastically increased with further increases to the high activation level (HIC: 288%-507%, BrIC: 1%-25%, and MPS (occipital): 23%-305%). Neck damping changes from low to high decreased all values of TBI metrics, particularly in Zhang’s study (up to 40% reductions). ConclusionOur results underscore the pivotal role of neck muscle activation and neck damping in TBI mitigation and holds promise to advance effective TBI prevention and protection strategies for diverse applications.
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This content will become publicly available on March 28, 2026
Fluid mechanical study of rotation-induced traumatic brain injury
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a serious health issue. Studies have highlighted the severity of rotation-induced TBI. However, the role of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in transmitting the impact from the skull to the soft brain matter remains unclear. Herein, we use experiments and computations to define and probe this role in a simplified setup. A spherical hydrogel ball, serving as a soft brain model, was subjected to controlled rotation within a water bath, emulating the CSF, and filling a transparent cylinder. The cylinder and ball velocities, as well as the ball’s deformation over time, were measured. We found that the soft hydrogel ball is very sensitive to decelerating rotational impacts, experiencing significant deformation during the process. A finite-element code is written to simulate the process. The hydrogel ball is modeled as a poroelastic material infused with fluid and its coupling with the suspending fluid is handled by an arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian method. The results indicate that the density contrast, as well as the rotational velocity difference, between the hydrogel ball and the suspending fluid, play a central role in the ball’s deformation due to centrifugal forces. This approach contributes to a deeper understanding of brain injuries and may portend the development of preventive measures and improved treatment strategies.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2322067
- PAR ID:
- 10579402
- Publisher / Repository:
- American Physical Society
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Physical review fluids
- ISSN:
- 2469-9918
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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