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Anterior longitudinal ligament injuries in whiplash may lead to cervical instability.
Med Eng Phys. 2006 Jul; 28(6):515-24.ME

Abstract

Although whiplash injuries account for a significant annual cost to society, the exact mechanism of injury and affected tissues remain unknown. Previous investigations documented injuries to the cervical anterior longitudinal ligament in whiplash. The present investigation implemented a comprehensively validated computational model to quantify level-dependent distraction magnitudes of this structure in whiplash. Maximum ligament distractions approached failure levels, particularly in middle to lower cervical levels, and occurred during the initial phase of head-neck kinematics. In particular, the C5-C6 anterior longitudinal ligament sustained distraction magnitudes as high as 2.6mm during the retraction phase, corresponding to 56% of distraction necessary to result in ligament failure. Present results demonstrated that anterior structures in the lower cervical spine may be susceptible to injury through excess distraction during the retraction phase of whiplash, which likely occurs prior to head restraint contact. Susceptibility of these structures is likely due to non-physiologic loading placed on the cervical spinal column as the head translates posteriorly relative to the thorax. Injury to anterior spinal structures can result in clinical indications including cervical instability in extension, axial rotation, and lateral bending modes. Mitigation of whiplash injury may be achieved by minimizing head retraction during initial stages of whiplash.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, 9200 W. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53226, USA. stemps@mcw.eduNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16289824

Citation

Stemper, Brian D., et al. "Anterior Longitudinal Ligament Injuries in Whiplash May Lead to Cervical Instability." Medical Engineering & Physics, vol. 28, no. 6, 2006, pp. 515-24.
Stemper BD, Yoganandan N, Pintar FA, et al. Anterior longitudinal ligament injuries in whiplash may lead to cervical instability. Med Eng Phys. 2006;28(6):515-24.
Stemper, B. D., Yoganandan, N., Pintar, F. A., & Rao, R. D. (2006). Anterior longitudinal ligament injuries in whiplash may lead to cervical instability. Medical Engineering & Physics, 28(6), 515-24.
Stemper BD, et al. Anterior Longitudinal Ligament Injuries in Whiplash May Lead to Cervical Instability. Med Eng Phys. 2006;28(6):515-24. PubMed PMID: 16289824.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Anterior longitudinal ligament injuries in whiplash may lead to cervical instability. AU - Stemper,Brian D, AU - Yoganandan,Narayan, AU - Pintar,Frank A, AU - Rao,Raj D, Y1 - 2005/11/10/ PY - 2005/03/17/received PY - 2005/08/23/revised PY - 2005/09/28/accepted PY - 2005/11/18/pubmed PY - 2006/8/19/medline PY - 2005/11/18/entrez SP - 515 EP - 24 JF - Medical engineering & physics JO - Med Eng Phys VL - 28 IS - 6 N2 - Although whiplash injuries account for a significant annual cost to society, the exact mechanism of injury and affected tissues remain unknown. Previous investigations documented injuries to the cervical anterior longitudinal ligament in whiplash. The present investigation implemented a comprehensively validated computational model to quantify level-dependent distraction magnitudes of this structure in whiplash. Maximum ligament distractions approached failure levels, particularly in middle to lower cervical levels, and occurred during the initial phase of head-neck kinematics. In particular, the C5-C6 anterior longitudinal ligament sustained distraction magnitudes as high as 2.6mm during the retraction phase, corresponding to 56% of distraction necessary to result in ligament failure. Present results demonstrated that anterior structures in the lower cervical spine may be susceptible to injury through excess distraction during the retraction phase of whiplash, which likely occurs prior to head restraint contact. Susceptibility of these structures is likely due to non-physiologic loading placed on the cervical spinal column as the head translates posteriorly relative to the thorax. Injury to anterior spinal structures can result in clinical indications including cervical instability in extension, axial rotation, and lateral bending modes. Mitigation of whiplash injury may be achieved by minimizing head retraction during initial stages of whiplash. SN - 1350-4533 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/16289824/Anterior_longitudinal_ligament_injuries_in_whiplash_may_lead_to_cervical_instability_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -