1969
DOI: 10.1007/bf00692508
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Pathomorphology of experimental head injury due to rotational acceleration

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Cited by 40 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…75 Other studies investigating head injury tolerance due to rotational acceleration have also focused on higher severities including diffuse axonal injury. 44,62 …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…75 Other studies investigating head injury tolerance due to rotational acceleration have also focused on higher severities including diffuse axonal injury. 44,62 …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The current parametric study analyzed the effects of different angular loading profiles on internal brain mechanics using a simplified approach. Translation effects were not introduced because experimental and analytical modeling results have shown that strains are primarily controlled by angular loading even in the presence of translational accelerations (Holbourn, 1943;Huang et al, 1999;Lee et al, 1987;Ommaya and Gennarelli, 1974;Unterharnscheidt and Higgins, 1969;Zhang et al, 2006). In general, peak principal strains increased with increasing separation time interval for both types of biphasic pulses.…”
Section: Article In Pressmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is complex injury associated with a wide spectrum of symptoms and detriment, ranging from mild levels, such as concussion that causes transient unconsciousness and nominal neurological impairment, to severe forms, such as diffuse axonal injury (DAI) that leads to prolonged coma accompanied by damage throughout the white matter of the brain (Gennarelli et al, 1982, Hardy, 2007, Kleiven, 2002. Although a complete understanding of the causation and effect relationship between mechanical input and associated brain injury remains to be developed, it has been reported that relative motion between the brain and skull and resultant brain deformation are primarily induced by rotational loading, which consequently trigger many types of brain trauma , Hardy et al, 1994, Holbourn, 1943, Kleiven, 2002, Ommaya and Hirsch, 1971, Unterharnscheidt and Higgins, 1969. However, it is also understood that the transient intracranial pressure elevation has negative effects on the brain (Chason et al, 1958, Gurdjian et al, 1961, Hardy, 2007, Kleiven, 2013, Masuzawa et al, 1976, Nahum et al, 1977, Nusholtz et al, 1984, Stalnaker et al, 1977, Trosseille et al, 1992, VandeVord et al, 2008, von Holst and Li, 2013 and is directly related to resultant linear acceleration measured at the center of gravity (c.g.)…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%