Materials Characterization of Cranial Simulants for Blast-Induced Traumatic Brain Injury

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Abstract

Introduction: The mechanical response of brain tissue to high-speed forces in the blast and blunt traumatic brain injury is poorly understood. Object-to-object variation and interspecies differences are current limitations in animal and cadaver studies conducted to study damage mechanisms. Biofidelic and transparent tissue simulants allow the use of high-speed optical diagnostics during a blast event, making it possible to observe deformations and damage patterns for comparison to observed injuries seen post-mortem in traumatic brain injury victims. Methods: Material properties of several tissue simulants were quantified using standard mechanical characterization techniques, that is, shear rheometric, tensile, and compressive testing. Results: Polyacrylamide simulants exhibited the best optical and mechanical property matching with the fewest trade-offs in the design of a cranial test object. Polyacrylamide gels yielded densities of ~1.04 g/cc and shear moduli ranging 1.3-14.55 kPa, allowing gray and white matter simulant tuning to a 30-35% difference in shear for biofidelity. Conclusions: These materials are intended for use as layered cranial phantoms in a shock tube and open field blasts, with focus on observing phenomena occurring at the interfaces of adjacent tissue simulant types or material-fluid boundaries. Mechanistic findings from these studies may be used to inform the design of protective gear to mitigate blast injuries.

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Wermer, A., Kerwin, J., Welsh, K., Mejia-Alvarez, R., Tartis, M., & Willis, A. (2020). Materials Characterization of Cranial Simulants for Blast-Induced Traumatic Brain Injury. In Military Medicine (Vol. 185, pp. 205–213). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/milmed/usz228

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