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A comparison between rib fracture patterns in peri- and post-mortem compressive injury in a piglet model

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 03:42 authored by Amanda Bradley, Michael Swain, J. Waddell, Rajarshi DasRajarshi Das, Josie Athens, Jules Kieser
Objectives: Forensic biomechanics is increasingly being used to explain how observed injuries occur. We studied infant rib fractures from a biomechanical and morphological perspective using a porcine model. Methods: We used 24, 6th ribs of one day old domestic pigs Sus scrofa, divided into three groups, desiccated (representing post-mortem trauma), fresh ribs with intact periosteum (representing peri-mortem trauma) and those stored at -20. °C. Two experiments were designed to study their biomechanical behaviour fracture morphology: ribs were axially compressed and subjected to four-point bending in an Instron 3339 fitted with custom jigs. Morphoscopic analysis of resultant fractures consisted of standard optical methods, micro-CT (μCT) and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM). Results: During axial compression fresh ribs did not fracture because of energy absorption capabilities of their soft and fluidic components. In flexure tests, dry ribs showed typical elastic-brittle behaviour with long linear load-extension curves, followed by short non-linear elastic (hyperelastic) behaviour and brittle fracture. Fresh ribs showed initial linear-elastic behaviour, followed by strain softening and visco-plastic responses. During the course of loading, dry bone showed minimal observable damage prior to the onset of unstable fracture. Frozen then thawed bone showed similar patterns to fresh bone. Morphologically, fresh ribs showed extensive periosteal damage to the tensile surface with areas of collagen fibre pull-out along the tensile surface. While all dry ribs fractured precipitously, with associated fibre pull-out, the latter feature was absent in thawed ribs. Conclusions: Our study highlights the fact that under controlled loading, fresh piglet ribs (representing perimortem trauma) did not fracture through bone, but was associated with periosteal tearing.

History

Journal

Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials

Volume

33

Issue

1

Start page

67

End page

75

Total pages

9

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013 Elsevier Ltd.

Former Identifier

2006073684

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-10-20

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