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Assessing women's lacrosse head impacts using finite element modelling
Date Issued
2018-04
Date Available
2019-04-15T10:46:01Z
Abstract
Recently studies have assessed the ability of helmets to reduce peak linear and rotational acceleration for women's lacrosse head impacts. However, such measures have had low correlation with injury. Maximum principal strain interprets loading curves which provide better injury prediction than peak linear and rotational acceleration, especially in compliant situations which create low magnitude accelerations but long impact durations. The purpose of this study was to assess head and helmet impacts in women's lacrosse using finite element modelling. Linear and rotational acceleration loading curves from women's lacrosse impacts to a helmeted and an unhelmeted Hybrid III headform were input into the University College Dublin Brain Trauma Model. The finite element model was used to calculate maximum principal strain in the cerebrum. The results demonstrated for unhelmeted impacts, falls and ball impacts produce higher maximum principal strain values than stick and shoulder collisions. The strain values for falls and ball impacts were found to be within the range of concussion and traumatic brain injury. The results also showed that men's lacrosse helmets reduced maximum principal strain for follow-through slashing, falls and ball impacts. These findings are novel and demonstrate that for high risk events, maximum principal strain can be reduced by implementing the use of helmets if the rules of the sport do not effectively manage such situations.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Elsevier
Journal
Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
Volume
80
Start Page
20
End Page
26
Copyright (Published Version)
2018 Elsevier
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1751-6161
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Name
Clark_et_al_2018_-_Assessing_women's_lacrosse_head_impacts_-_UCD_Repository.pdf
Size
842.01 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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