Performance Evaluation of a Pre-computed Brain Response Atlas in Dummy Head Impacts.
Wei ZhaoCalvin KuoLyndia WuDavid B CamarilloSongbai JiPublished in: Annals of biomedical engineering (2017)
A pre-computed brain response atlas (pcBRA) may have the potential to accelerate the investigation of the biomechanical mechanisms of traumatic brain injury on a large-scale. In this study, we further enhance the technique and evaluate its performance using six degree-of-freedom angular velocity profiles from dummy head impacts. Using the pcBRA to simplify profiles into acceleration-only shapes, sufficiently accurate strain estimates were obtained for impacts with a major dominating velocity peak. However, they were largely under-estimated when substantial deceleration occurred that reversed the direction of the angular velocity. For these impacts, estimation accuracy was substantially improved with a biphasic profile simplification (average correlation coefficient and linear regression slope of 0.92 ± 0.03 and 0.95 ± 0.07 for biphasic shapes, respectively, vs. 0.80 ± 0.06 and 0.80 ± 0.08 for acceleration-only shapes). Peak maximum principal strain (ɛ p) and cumulative strain damage measure (CSDM) from the estimated strains consistently correlated stronger than kinematic metrics with respect to the baseline ɛ p and CSDM from the directly simulated responses, regardless of the brain region, and by a large margin (e.g., correlation of 0.93 vs. 0.75 compared to Brain Injury Criterion (BrIC) for ɛ p in the whole-brain, and 0.91 vs. 0.47 compared to BrIC for CSDM in the corpus callosum). These findings further support the pre-computation technique for accurate, real-time strain estimation, which could be important to accelerate model-based brain injury studies in the future.
Keyphrases
- brain injury
- cerebral ischemia
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- resting state
- white matter
- traumatic brain injury
- functional connectivity
- blood flow
- diffusion weighted imaging
- high resolution
- oxidative stress
- escherichia coli
- risk assessment
- computed tomography
- blood brain barrier
- current status
- mass spectrometry
- severe traumatic brain injury
- upper limb