Brain Injury Risk from Primary Blast

Abstract

Military service members are often exposed to at least one explosive event, and many blast-exposed veterans present with symptoms of traumatic brain injury. However, there is little information on the intensity and duration of blast necessary to cause brain injury. Varying intensity shock tube blasts were focused on the head of anesthetized ferrets, whose thorax and abdomen were protected. Injury evaluations included physiologic consequences, gross necropsy, and histologic diagnosis. The resulting apnea, meningeal bleeding, and fatality were analyzed using logistic regressions to determine injury risk functions. Increasing severity of blast exposure demonstrated increasing apnea immediately after the blast. Gross necropsy revealed hemorrhages, frequently near the brain stem, at the highest blast intensities. Apnea, bleeding, and fatality risk functions from blast exposure to the head were determined for peak overpressure and positive-phase duration. The 50% risk of apnea and moderate hemorrhage were similar, whereas the 50% risk of mild hemorrhage was independent of duration and required lower overpressures (144 kPa). Another fatality risk function was determined with existing data for scaled positive-phase durations from 1 millisecond to 20 milliseconds. The first primary blast brain injury risk assessments for mild and moderate/severe injuries in a gyrencephalic animal model were determined. The blast level needed to cause a mild/moderate brain injury may be similar to or less than that needed for pulmonary injury. The risk functions can be used in future research for blast brain injury by providing realistic injury risks to guide the design of protection or evaluate injury.

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jul 24, 2012
Accession Number
ADA597427

Entities

People

  • Bruce P. Capehart
  • Cameron R. Bass
  • Jonathan B. Foster
  • Karin A. Rafaels
  • Matthew B Panzer
  • Richard W. Kent
  • Robert S. Salzar
  • Sanford H. Feldman
  • Tim Walilko
  • William A. Woods

Organizations

  • University of Pennsylvania

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Counter IED

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Abstracts
  • Brain
  • Brain Injuries
  • Brain Stem
  • Fatalities
  • Hemorrhage
  • Information Operations
  • Intensity
  • Military Research
  • Overpressure
  • Risk
  • Risk Analysis
  • Shock Tubes

Fields of Study

  • Medicine

Readers

  • Aviation Safety Risk Assessment.
  • Cardiovascular Physiology
  • Neurotrauma and Rehabilitation Medicine.