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Effects of abnormal posture on capsular ligament elongations in a computational model subjected to whiplash loading.
J Biomech. 2005 Jun; 38(6):1313-23.JB

Abstract

Although considerable biomechanical investigations have been conducted to understand the response of the cervical spine under whiplash (rear impact-induced postero-anterior loading to the thorax), studies delineating the effects of initial spinal curvature are limited. This study advanced the hypothesis that abnormal curvatures (straight or kyphotic) of the cervical column affect spinal kinematics during whiplash loading. Specifically, compared to the normal lordotic curvature, abnormal curvatures altered facet joint ligament elongations. The quantifications of these elongations were accomplished using a validated mathematical model of the human head-neck complex that simulated three curvatures. The model was validated using companion experiments conducted in our laboratory that provided facet joint kinematics as a function of cervical spinal level. Regional facet joint ligament elongations were investigated as a function of whiplash loading in the four local anatomic regions of each joint. Under the normal posture, greatest elongations occurred in the dorsal anatomic region at the C2-C3 level and in the lateral anatomic region from C3-C4 to C6-C7 levels. Abnormal postures increased elongation magnitudes in these regions by up to 70%. Excessive ligament elongations induce laxity to the facet joint, particularly at the local regions of the anatomy in the abnormal kyphotic posture. Increased laxity may predispose the cervical spine to accelerated degenerative changes over time and lead to instability. Results from the present study, while providing quantified level- and region-specific kinematic data, concur with clinical findings that abnormal spinal curvatures enhance the likelihood of whiplash injury and may have long-term clinical and biomechanical implications.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, 9200 West Wisconsin Avenue, VA Medical Center, Milwaukee, WI 53226, USA.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Evaluation Study
Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

15863116

Citation

Stemper, Brian D., et al. "Effects of Abnormal Posture On Capsular Ligament Elongations in a Computational Model Subjected to Whiplash Loading." Journal of Biomechanics, vol. 38, no. 6, 2005, pp. 1313-23.
Stemper BD, Yoganandan N, Pintar FA. Effects of abnormal posture on capsular ligament elongations in a computational model subjected to whiplash loading. J Biomech. 2005;38(6):1313-23.
Stemper, B. D., Yoganandan, N., & Pintar, F. A. (2005). Effects of abnormal posture on capsular ligament elongations in a computational model subjected to whiplash loading. Journal of Biomechanics, 38(6), 1313-23.
Stemper BD, Yoganandan N, Pintar FA. Effects of Abnormal Posture On Capsular Ligament Elongations in a Computational Model Subjected to Whiplash Loading. J Biomech. 2005;38(6):1313-23. PubMed PMID: 15863116.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Effects of abnormal posture on capsular ligament elongations in a computational model subjected to whiplash loading. AU - Stemper,Brian D, AU - Yoganandan,Narayan, AU - Pintar,Frank A, PY - 2004/06/19/accepted PY - 2005/5/3/pubmed PY - 2005/8/24/medline PY - 2005/5/3/entrez SP - 1313 EP - 23 JF - Journal of biomechanics JO - J Biomech VL - 38 IS - 6 N2 - Although considerable biomechanical investigations have been conducted to understand the response of the cervical spine under whiplash (rear impact-induced postero-anterior loading to the thorax), studies delineating the effects of initial spinal curvature are limited. This study advanced the hypothesis that abnormal curvatures (straight or kyphotic) of the cervical column affect spinal kinematics during whiplash loading. Specifically, compared to the normal lordotic curvature, abnormal curvatures altered facet joint ligament elongations. The quantifications of these elongations were accomplished using a validated mathematical model of the human head-neck complex that simulated three curvatures. The model was validated using companion experiments conducted in our laboratory that provided facet joint kinematics as a function of cervical spinal level. Regional facet joint ligament elongations were investigated as a function of whiplash loading in the four local anatomic regions of each joint. Under the normal posture, greatest elongations occurred in the dorsal anatomic region at the C2-C3 level and in the lateral anatomic region from C3-C4 to C6-C7 levels. Abnormal postures increased elongation magnitudes in these regions by up to 70%. Excessive ligament elongations induce laxity to the facet joint, particularly at the local regions of the anatomy in the abnormal kyphotic posture. Increased laxity may predispose the cervical spine to accelerated degenerative changes over time and lead to instability. Results from the present study, while providing quantified level- and region-specific kinematic data, concur with clinical findings that abnormal spinal curvatures enhance the likelihood of whiplash injury and may have long-term clinical and biomechanical implications. SN - 0021-9290 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/15863116/Effects_of_abnormal_posture_on_capsular_ligament_elongations_in_a_computational_model_subjected_to_whiplash_loading_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -