Yale Bulletin and Calendar

March 17, 2006|Volume 34, Number 22


BULLETIN HOME

VISITING ON CAMPUS

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

IN THE NEWS

BULLETIN BOARD

CLASSIFIED ADS


SEARCH ARCHIVES

DEADLINES

DOWNLOAD FORMS

BULLETIN STAFF


PUBLIC AFFAIRS HOME

NEWS RELEASES

E-MAIL US


YALE HOME PAGE


Study: Turned head results
in more serious whiplash

People whose heads are turned at the time of a rear-impact collision risk a much more serious whiplash injury with potentially chronic symptoms, and a current School of Medicine study explains why.

"We believe this is the first study to identify, quantify and determine the mode of cervical spine injury sustained during a rear-impact collision when a person in the vehicle has their head turned," says Manohar Panjabi, a professor in the Departments of Orthopedics and Mechanical Engineering and first author of the study in Spine. "This data may assist clinicians in developing improved diagnostic and treatment protocols."

Previous clinical studies have found that people sitting in a vehicle with their heads turned at the time of rear-impact sustained more severe injuries and longer-lasting symptoms. These studies show that the rotated head posture was the major factor causing more severe chronic symptoms, even when considering the presence of a head restraint and the state of preparedness.

Panjabi and his co-authors performed rear-impact simulations with the head turned at the time of impact using six human cervical spine specimens and a sled apparatus. They determined the severity of the neck ligament injuries due to four different impact accelerations ranging from 3.5 to 8 g (force = mass x acceleration). Neck ligament injury was first detected at 5 g and at the C5-C6 spinal level. At higher-impact accelerations, the injuries became more severe and spread throughout the neck.

The researchers directly compared their findings with those obtained in their previous study of rear-impact collisions with head facing forward at the time of impact. Rotated head posture at the time of rear impact caused significantly greater neck injury severity and more complex injuries, as compared to facing forward.

They hypothesize that there are more severe and complex injuries for two reasons. First, there is an initial stretch in the neck ligaments, which is not present when the head is facing forward, and during the rear impact, the ligaments are stretched further. This over-stretching of the ligaments can cause ligament tears and spinal instability, leading to neck pain. Second, rear impact with rotated head posture causes three-dimensional head and neck motions, as compared to only two-dimensional motions in the head-forward posture. These three-dimensional motions cause more complex types of neck injuries.

Co-authors include Paul Ivancic, Travis Maak, Dr. Yasuhiro Tominaga and Wolfgang Rubin.

-- By Jacqueline Weaver


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Patient care expert Paul Cleary named dean of public health

Gift will help expand music education for city students

Yale experts provide cancer information on 'Healthline'

Alumnus playwright debuts 'dance of the holy ghosts' at Yale Rep

Noted journalists to discuss media's role in international justice

Public service is focus of talk by former U.S. secretary of state

Library acquires the papers of artist and gay rights activist Harvey Fierstein

SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT NEWS

Scientists say most human-chimp differences due to gene regulation

Events to mark guitarist's two decades of teaching

Yale biomedical engineers create stable network of fine blood vessels

Fortune magazine editor to deliver lecture on 'Power and Leadership'

Famed composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim to visit campus

Event to explore how Christians, Muslims view government

Event to explore executive power and its recent effects

MEDICAL SCHOOL NEWS

Slifka Center for Jewish Life at Yale to host 'Seeing Sinai' . . .

Survey shows that STARS alumni give program high marks

In Memoriam: Dr. Lawrence Brass

Celebration of the library's 75th anniversary continues . . .

Forum will explore issue of payment for forest ecosystem services

Free haircuts offered to those who donate to Locks of Love

Memorial service planned for Dr. Charles McKhann

Campus Notes


Bulletin Home|Visiting on Campus|Calendar of Events|In the News

Bulletin Board|Classified Ads|Search Archives|Deadlines

Bulletin Staff|Public Affairs|News Releases| E-Mail Us|Yale Home