Towards Determining Mechanical Properties of Brain-Skull Interface Under Tension and Compression
Sajjad Arzemanzadeh, Benjamin Zwick, Karol Miller, Tim Rosenow, Stuart I. Hodgetts, and Adam Wittek

TL;DR
This study introduces a novel experimental and computational protocol to determine the biomechanical properties of the brain-skull interface, revealing different behaviors under tension and compression, which impacts brain injury modeling.
Contribution
It presents a new method combining biomechanical experiments and finite element simulations to accurately characterize the brain-skull interface properties.
Findings
Interface behaves differently under tension and compression
Rupture observed under tensile load, not under compression
Traditional assumptions of rigid or frictionless contact may be inaccurate
Abstract
Computational biomechanics models of the brain have become an important tool for investigating the brain responses to mechanical loads. The geometry, loading conditions, and constitutive properties of such brain models are well-studied and generally accepted. However, there is a lack of experimental evidence to support models of the layers of tissues (brain-skull interface) connecting the brain with the skull which determine boundary conditions for the brain. We present a new protocol for determining the biomechanical properties of the brain-skull interface and present the preliminary results (for a small number of tissue samples extracted from sheep cadaver heads). The method consists of biomechanical experiments using brain tissue and brain-skull complex (consisting of the brain tissue, brain-skull interface, and skull bone) and comprehensive computer simulation of the experiments…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine · Automotive and Human Injury Biomechanics
