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Short Communications from the AAAM 65th Annual Scientific Conference

Delta-v slope as an indicator of injury

, &
Pages S165-S169 | Published online: 26 Oct 2021
 

Abstract

Objective

This study’s objective was to examine a crash severity characteristic and the relationship as an indicator of abdominal injury causation.

Methods

Data were analyzed from 23 CIREN case vehicles involved in a frontal type collision, had an AIS 2+ abdominal injury, and contained an electronic data recorder (EDR) download. Data was downloaded from the NHTSA and IIHS crash test databases for comparison. Data was run through a MATLAB algorithm calculating the maximum velocity-time profile slope. This data was compared to the available crash tests.

Results

The CIREN vehicle EDR velocity-time slopes ranged from 233 m/s2 to 434 m/s2 for crashes with a delta-v range of 42 km/h to 77 km/h. NHTSA NCAP comparable data was available for all cases, and the slopes ranged from 263 m/s2 to 405 m/s2 calculated from the collected accelerometer. Three comparable tests were available from the IIHS database and the calculated slopes ranged from 252 m/s2 to 298 m/s2. Four test vehicles had EDR data, two each from NHTSA and IIHS and slopes ranged from 245 m/s2 to 281 m/s2. The crash test EDRs slope calculations were lower than the accelerometer data. Nine of the 12 case vehicles had slope values lower than the comparable NCAP accelerometer velocity-time slopes.

Conclusions

Vehicle velocity-time profile can be beneficial to examine the characteristics of crash severity and potential injury. This small sample of field crashes did not indicate a clear relationship of abdominal injury related to crash severity measured by the EDR delta-v slope. EDR results can be considered when determining crash severity, but the limitations need to be understood.

Additional information

Funding

The statements made are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the funding agencies. This research was supported in part by USDOT NHTSA contract number DTNH2217D00071 and the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Research.

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