Abstract

Blast traumatic brain injury is ubiquitous in modern military conflict with significant morbidity and mortality. Yet the mechanism by which blast overpressure waves cause specific intracranial injury in humans remains unclear. Reviewing of both the clinical experience of neurointensivists and neurosurgeons who treated service members exposed to blast have revealed a pattern of injury to cerebral blood vessels, manifested as subarachnoid hemorrhage, pseudoaneurysm, and early diffuse cerebral edema. Additionally, a seminal neuropathologic case series of victims of blast traumatic brain injury (TBI) showed unique astroglial scarring patterns at the following tissue interfaces: subpial glial plate, perivascular, periventricular, and cerebral gray-white interface. The uniting feature of both the clinical and neuropathologic findings in blast TBI is the co-location of injury to material interfaces, be it solid-fluid or solid-solid interface. This motivates the hypothesis that blast TBI is an injury at the intracranial mechanical interfaces. In order to investigate the intracranial interface dynamics, we performed a novel set of computational simulations using a model human head simplified but containing models of gyri, sulci, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), ventricles, and vasculature with high spatial resolution of the mechanical interfaces. Simulations were performed within a hybrid Eulerian—Lagrangian simulation suite (CTH coupled via Zapotec to Sierra Mechanics). Because of the large computational meshes, simulations required high performance computing resources. Twenty simulations were performed across multiple exposure scenarios—overpressures of 150, 250, and 500 kPa with 1 ms overpressure durations—for multiple blast exposures (front blast, side blast, and wall blast) across large variations in material model parameters (brain shear properties, skull elastic moduli). All simulations predict fluid cavitation within CSF (where intracerebral vasculature reside) with cavitation occurring deep and diffusely into cerebral sulci. These cavitation events are adjacent to high interface strain rates at the subpial glial plate. Larger overpressure simulations (250 and 500kPa) demonstrated intraventricular cavitation—also associated with adjacent high periventricular strain rates. Additionally, models of embedded intraparenchymal vascular structures—with diameters as small as 0.6 mm—predicted intravascular cavitation with adjacent high perivascular strain rates. The co-location of local maxima of strain rates near several of the regions that appear to be preferentially damaged in blast TBI (vascular structures, subpial glial plate, perivascular regions, and periventricular regions) suggest that intracranial interface dynamics may be important in understanding how blast overpressures leads to intracranial injury.

Highlights

  • Traumatic brain injury is a “signature wound” of modern conflict with estimates of over 320,000 service members wounded with traumatic brain injuries (TBI) [1] during Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom

  • In order to explicitly capture the mechanics of these interfaces we developed a unique hybrid computational suite capable of resolving the mechanical interfaces within an idealized human head

  • We did not explicitly model these structures with the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), it is plausible that the existing vascular structures within these high strain / strain rate regions would be disrupted and lead to subarachnoid hemorrhage, pseudoaneurysms, or delayed arterial vasospasm found in severe blast TBI

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Summary

Introduction

Traumatic brain injury is a “signature wound” of modern conflict with estimates of over 320,000 service members wounded with traumatic brain injuries (TBI) [1] during Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom. In order to differentiate blast injury components, there exist four natural divisions: primary injury—blast pressure wave transmitting into skull; secondary injury—penetration of projectiles through the skull and brain; tertiary injury—acceleration / deceleration from blast; and quaternary injury—thermal, chemical, other injuries to head, face, scalp, and respiratory tract. Primary blast injury is hypothesized to be unique (relative to other mechanisms of TBI), this is possibly secondary to the high frequency stress waves interacting with the human head not experienced in traditional blunt impact TBI. Because of the interaction of the blast pressure wave with the skull, it is hypothesized that the skull acts as a high frequency filter [6, 7] for incoming stress waves and removes the highest frequency components from being transmitted into the brain

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