Active muscle response contributes to increased injury risk of lower extremity in occupant-knee airbag interaction.
Bingbing NieDeepak SathyanarayanXin YeJeff R CrandallMatthew B PanzerPublished in: Traffic injury prevention (2019)
The mechanism of higher leg injuries in the presence of KAB deployment in real-world crashes can be interpreted by the increased effective body mass, axial compression along the shafts of long bones, and altered pre-impact posture due to muscle contraction. The present analysis suggests that active muscle response can increase the risk of lower extremity injury during occupant-KAB interaction. This study demonstrated the feasibility of advanced human models to investigate the influence of physiologically based parameters on injury outcomes evidenced in field study and insight from computational examination on human variability for development of future restraint systems. Future efforts are recommended on realistic vehicle and restraint environment and advanced modeling strategies toward a full understanding of KAB efficacy.