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A computational study of injury severity and pattern sustained by overweight drivers in frontal motor vehicle crashes

Authors :
Alan M. Shih
Wei Shen
Shankuan Zhu
Xiaoguang Ma
Steven B. Heymsfield
Jong-Eun Kim
Il Hwan Kim
Frank A. Pintar
Purushottam W. Laud
David B. Allison
Phillip C. Shum
Source :
Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering. 17:965-977
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2012.

Abstract

The objective of this study was to examine the role of body mass and subcutaneous fat in injury severity and pattern sustained by overweight drivers. Finite element models were created to represent the geometry and properties of subcutaneous adipose tissue in the torso with data obtained from reconstructed magnetic resonance imaging data-sets. The torso adipose tissue models were then integrated into the standard multibody dummy models together with increased inertial parameters and sizes of the limbs to represent overweight occupants. Frontal crash simulations were carried out considering a variety of occupant restraint systems and regional body injuries were measured. The results revealed that differences in body mass and fat distribution have an impact on injury severity and pattern. Even though the torso adipose tissue of overweight subjects contributed to reduce abdominal injury, the momentum effect of a greater body mass of overweight subjects was more dominant over the cushion effect of the adipose tissue, increasing risk of other regional body injuries except abdomen. Through statistical analysis of the results, strong correlations (p 0.01) were found between body mass index and regional body injuries except neck injury. The analysis also revealed that a greater momentum of overweight males leads to greater forward torso and pelvic excursions that account for higher risks (p 0.001) of head, thorax and lower extremity injury than observed in non-overweight males. The findings have important implications for improving the vehicle and occupant safety systems designed for the increasing global obese population.

Details

ISSN :
14768259 and 10255842
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....030cb963a217d96c50f04475c49e0a68