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Shock Waves May Damage Soldiers' Brains
Finding may help develop better combat helmets
8/27/09 When today's soldiers enter combat, they're better
protected from explosions than the military personnel of any
previous war. Ultra-strong helmets shield them from the flying
shrapnel of homemade bombs; high-tech cushioning cradles their
skulls during sudden impacts with the ground. But because modern
soldiers are surviving explosions that would have taken the
lives of Vietnam-era infantrymen, army hospitals are seeing a
rise in a particularly painful war wound—traumatic brain injury
(TBI).
TBI can range from a simple concussion to damage with long-term
effects, including impaired cognitive abilities and even anxiety
and depression. New research is helping to explain how those
injuries come about, potentially pointing the way to helmet
designs to reduce brain damage. Using code originally designed
to simulate how a detonated weapon rattles a building or tank,
physicists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in
California and the University of Rochester in New York modeled
an all-too-real situation: a 5-pound bomb exploding 15 feet from
a soldier's head. Their goal was to understand the effects of
the high-speed shock wave that follows an explosion.
Some doctors have suggested that the wave reaches the brain
through the eyes or ears; others say it causes compression of
the chest and a subsequent surge of blood to the brain. The new
research, soon to appear in the journal Physical Review Letters,
shows that the shock wave doesn't accelerate the head enough to
damage the brain. Instead, it seems to affect the skull
directly.
"Your skull is not exactly rigid, so the pressure actually
deforms the skull as the blast wave moves across," said Eric
Blackman, who is one of the authors of the study. "That flexure
drives a stress wave that propagates into the brain. It's
something like an inverse earthquake."
The waves flex the skull by only about the width of a human
hair. But according to coauthor William Moss, "that's enough to
generate pressures in the brain comparable to [an] impact." The
reason is that the brain contains a lot of water. "Push on it a
little bit and you get a lot of pressure," said coauthor Michael
King. Because the blast wave sweeps across the skull in just a
fraction of a second, "you don't have time for the pressure to
dissipate, so you get a localized region of very high pressure."
David Moore, a vascular neurologist and the deputy director of
research at the Defense Veterans Brain Injury Center,
headquartered in Washington, D.C., said that the skull flexure
mechanism proposed by the physicists is just one hypothesis
among several competing concepts of blast waves and injury.
“Like all these hypotheses there’s yet work to be done in terms
of validation,” he said. “There are too many unknown variables
from the constitutive properties of brain and skull at high
strain rates along with other associated blast phenomena.”
The team considered the performance of Kevlar helmets with two
kinds of cushioning systems: a nylon web system that was retired
in 2003, and the foam pads of the Advanced Combat Helmet, which
is standard-issue for today's soldiers. The results were
unsettling.
To protect soldiers from bullets and shrapnel, modern helmet
design maintains a 1.3-cm gap between helmet and head; in the
simulation, the blast wave washed into the helmet through this
gap. "The helmet acts as a windscoop, so the pressure between
the skull and helmet is larger than the blast wave by itself,"
King said. While the ACH's pads mostly prevented this underwash,
they also passed on forces to the skull.
King suggested that the pads' stiffness could be optimized to
"take the best of both worlds; it doesn't allow the blast in
there, and it doesn't transfer [forces] from the helmet to the
head." He stressed that when making changes to the helmet,
preserving its ability to reduce impacts and fend off bullets
was paramount. "You'd have to be careful to make sure it doesn't
interfere with what the helmet does very well, which is stopping
fragments and bullets," he said. "The whole idea why there was a
big gap between skull and helmet in the first place, is it makes
it more likely for the soldier to survive if a bullet hits the
helmet."
The researchers stopped short of claiming the high-pressure
regions caused by blast waves would then cause TBI. But their
findings seem to clear some of the fog surrounding closed head
injuries, said Brent Masel, a neurologist and the president and
medical director of the Transitional Learning Center, a post
acute brain injury treatment program in Galveston, TX.
"We classify brain injuries as mild, moderate, or severe based
on the amount of trauma they have at that time… but the severity
of injury and eventual outcome may very often be different,"
Masel said." Assuming their model is correct, this answers one
of the questions that keeps getting raised—how do these men and
women who have a minor blast injury have symptoms? It may be
that the blast injury isn't so minor."