Upper Extremity Injuries Related to Air Bag Deployments

940716

03/01/1994

Event
International Congress & Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
From our crash investigations of air bag equipped passenger cars, a subset of upper extremity injuries are presented that are related to air bag deployments. Minor hand, wrist or forearm injuries-contusions, abrasions, and sprains are not uncommonly reported. Infrequently, hand fractures have been sustained and, in isolated cases, fractures of the forearm bones or of the thumb and/or adjacent hand. The close proximity of the forearm or hand to the air bag module door is related to most of the fractures identified. Steering wheel air bag deployments can fling the hand-forearm into the instrument panel, rearview mirror or windshield as indicated by contact scuffs or tissue debris or the star burst (spider web) pattern of windshield breakage in front of the steering wheel.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/940716
Pages
12
Citation
Huelke, D., Moore, J., Compton, T., Samuels, J. et al., "Upper Extremity Injuries Related to Air Bag Deployments," SAE Technical Paper 940716, 1994, https://doi.org/10.4271/940716.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Mar 1, 1994
Product Code
940716
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English