Abdominal impacts of handlebar injuries in the PIPER child model: a prevention study
Christoph Arneitz, Nico Erlinger, Corina Klug, Simone Oliver Senica, Thomas Kuenzer, Peter Spitzer, Georg Schalamon, Johannes Schalamon

TL;DR
This study examines how handlebar designs affect abdominal injuries in children during bicycle crashes and suggests improved designs could enhance safety.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel analysis of handlebar design effects on abdominal injuries in children using finite element simulations.
Findings
Child-specific handlebar grips reduce abdominal loading and injury metrics compared to standard grips.
Damaged handlebar ends show the highest injury potential in crash simulations.
Impact locations on the abdomen, liver, pancreas, and spleen were identified as critical for injury assessment.
Abstract
Analysis of data from bicycle accidents reveals that handlebar impacts are a significant cause of injury, particularly among children. Despite existing safety regulations, such as helmet requirements, little attention is given to abdominal injuries. The aim of this study is to investigate the influence of handlebar ends on abdominal loading during bicycle crashes. This study delves into the impact of five different handlebar designs on abdominal injuries during bicycle crashes, using finite element simulations with detailed Human Body Models (HBMs) of a six-year-old child (PIPER child model, Version 0.99.0). Four impact locations were identified in the injury scenario, selected according to the anatomical location of the most commonly injured organs, liver, pancreas, spleen and abdomen. Grip design features, such as shape and rigidity, significantly influence injury outcomes. Grips…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPelvic and Acetabular Injuries · Trauma Management and Diagnosis · Urological Disorders and Treatments
