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A biomechanical model of traumatic contusional injury produced by controlled cerebrocortical indentation in sheep

Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
Author
DUTCHKE, Jeffrey
116469 University of Adelaide
ANDERSON, Robert
116469 University of Adelaide
ccSANDOZ, Baptiste
175453 Arts et Métiers ParisTech
466360 Institut de Biomecanique Humaine Georges Charpak
FINNIE, John
116469 University of Adelaide
MANAVIS, Jim
116469 University of Adelaide
NISHIMOTO, Tetsuya
481231 Nihon University
MORRIS, Tom
116469 University of Adelaide
WELLS, Adam
116469 University of Adelaide
TURNER, Renée
116469 University of Adelaide
VINK, Robert
116469 University of Adelaide

URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10985/17857
Date
2016
Journal
IRCOBI Conference Proceedings

Abstract

A biomechanical model of traumatic contusional injury was used to map axonal damage and neuronal reaction proximal and distal from the contusion. The model uses a precisely controlled and characterised dynamic indentation of the cerebral cortex of anaesthetised sheep. The indentation (16.15-16.50 mm deep; contact speed 1.2-1.24 m/s) is made through a 20 mm craniotomy in the frontal bone. The brain is then perfused-fixed after 6 hours and sectioned at 5 mm intervals. Immunohistochemistry was used to detect axonal injury and neuronal reaction. Quantitation of injury was by an automatic counting algorithm applied to micrographs of each entire section. These maps were cross-checked with manual counts. The injury was characterised by well-defined zones radiating from the impact point; these were a region of haemorrhagic and necrotic tissue, subadjacent penumbra of axonal injury, and distal multi-focal and diffuse areas of neuronal positivity. The model includes precise characterisation of the contact load and the pattern of injury. This will allow future finite element modelling to be used to explore quantitative relationships between several forms of neural damage and the dynamics of the tissue deformation in a finite element model of the insult.

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