Pediatric Cervical Spine Strength and Stiffness in the Sagittal Plane
2019-22-0019
03/31/2020
- Features
- Event
- Content
- In the pediatric safety field the use of computer simulations to assess passenger kinematics is becoming more prevalent. However, there is a need for volunteer data to serve as a baseline for biomechanical responses to better appraise the biofidelity of these simulations. The objective of this study is to provide volunteer data of cervical spine strength and stiffness in 5-7 year old children. An isokinetic dynamometer was used to quantify strength and stiffness measurements. Twenty-three subjects with a mean age 5.9±0.7 participated. Children were stronger at mid-range of motion in both flexion and extension, and strongest in extension. Stiffness calculations for initial motions were higher for both flexion (0.277 Nm/°) and extension (0.227 Nm/°) than secondary motions (0.148 Nm/° and 0.095 Nm/°, respectively). This study offers a unique perspective to pediatric volunteers’ c-spine strength and stiffness, and can provide a better understanding of the head-neck kinematics of this young population.
- Pages
- 4
- Citation
- Zaragoza-Rivera, Y., Bolte IV, J., and Boucher, L., "Pediatric Cervical Spine Strength and Stiffness in the Sagittal Plane," SAE Technical Paper 2019-22-0019, 2020, https://doi.org/10.4271/2019-22-0019.