The Effect of Head-Forward Posture on Risk of Lower Neck Dislocation During Head-First Impacts: A Computational Investigation
Abstract
Subaxial cervical facet dislocation (CFD) is a severe neck injury associated with head-first impacts (HFI), yet the effect of pre-impact head-forward posture (HFP) on injury risk remains unclear. This study examined how HFP influences cervical spine kinematics, kinetics, and CFD risk during HFI. A modified Global Human Body Models Consortium (GHBMC) detailed head-neck finite element model simulated inverted drop tests (2 m/s) with varying pre-impact HFP (0–50 mm). The simulations reproduced the characteristic "S-shaped" neck deformation observed in prior experiments, with increasing eccentricity progressively elevating lower cervical spine anterior shear forces beyond physiological thresholds for eccentricities above 15 mm. Although limitations in intervertebral soft-tissue failure criteria prevented CFD occurrence in simulations, the results informed a cadaveric head-neck component inverted drop experiment (30 mm pre-HFI eccentricity) that resulted in complete C7/T1 dislocation. These findings indicate that pre-HFI head eccentricity affects cervical spine mechanics, increasing CFD risk by amplifying intervertebral shear forces. The study suggests that maintaining a neutral head posture in HFI scenarios may mitigate neck injury, and highlights the benefits of integrating computational and experimental models to enhance understanding of injury mechanisms and inform prevention strategies.
Related articles
Related articles are currently not available for this article.