Rib and sternum fracture risks for restrained occupants in frontal car crashes
Journal article, 2024
Most car occupant fatalities occur in frontal crashes and the thorax is the most frequently injured body region. The objectives of the study were, firstly, to quantify the relation between risk factors (such as speed and occupant age) and rib and sternum fracture injury probability in frontal car crashes, and, secondly, to evaluate whether rib fracture occurrence can predict sternum fractures.
Methods
Weighted German data from 1999-2021 were used to create the injury risk curves to predict both, at least moderate and at least serious, rib and sternum fracture risks. A contingency table for rib and sternum fractures allowed the calculation of sensitivity, specificity, and precision, as well as testing for the association.
Results
Elderly occupants (>= 65 years old) had increased rib and sternum fracture risk compared to mid aged occupants (18-64 years old). Besides occupant age, delta-V was always and sex sometimes a significant predictor for skeletal thoracic injury. Sternum fractures were more common than rib fractures and more likely to occur at any given delta-V. Sternum fractures occurred often in isolation. Female occupants were at higher risk than males to sustain at least moderate rib and sternum fractures together and sternum fractures in isolation. Rib and sternum fractures were associated, but low sensitivity and precision show that rib fractures do not predict sternum fractures well.
Conclusions
Elderly and female occupants were at the highest risk and should be targeted by thoracic injury criteria and thresholds for frontal crash occupant protection. Rib and sternum fractures were not associated. Therefore, sternum fractures need to be predicted and evaluated separately from rib fractures.
frontal crash
Field data
human body model
injury risk
thorax injury
Germany
Author
Aarti Ranmal
Traffic Safety Research at Autoliv India Pvt. Ltd
Junaid Shaikh
Traffic Safety Research at Autoliv India Pvt. Ltd
Nils Lübbe
Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Vehicle Safety
Traffic Injury Prevention
1538-9588 (ISSN) 1538-957X (eISSN)
Vol. 25 4 616-622Areas of Advance
Transport
Subject Categories
Surgery
Physiology
DOI
10.1080/15389588.2024.2329637
PubMed
38546451