Lower Extremity Injuries in Children Seated in Forward Facing Child Restraint Systems
The lower extremity is among the most frequently injured body regions for children restrained by forward facing child restraint systems (FFCRS), accounting for 28% of their clinically significant injuries, defined as AIS 2 and greater injuries excluding concussions. Despite the prevalence of these injuries, the current U.S. Motor Vehicle Safety Standard governing FFCRS (FMVSS 213) does not provide a direct assessment of the biomechanical risk of lower extremity fracture nor do the current pediatric test devices provide adequate instrumentation to detect the risk of such injuries. Before improvements can be made to the anthropometric test devices (ATDs) or test procedures to address these limitations, understanding of the sources and mechanisms of these injuries is necessary. Therefore, the objective of this study was to document location, source, and crash circumstances of lower extremity injuries in children seated in FFCRS. Utilizing two sources of data, PCPS and CIREN, 20 in-depth investigations of crashes involving children seated in FFCRS with lower extremity injuries were reviewed to determine the nature of the injuries and the circumstances under which they occurred. Injuries below the knee were the most common, particularly to the tibia/fibula, and they most often occurred due to interaction with the vehicle seatback in front of the child's seating position. These injuries were sustained most commonly in frontal impacts although interaction with the seatback also occurred in other crash types. This interaction with the seatback was exacerbated by possible contributing factors such as intrusion of the front seatback into the child's occupant space or FFCRS misuse resulting in increased excursion of the child during impact. This review of cases of children in FFCRS with AIS 2 and greater lower extremity injury points to the role of the seatback in the occurrence of these injuries, suggesting the need to consider this interaction in the seatback design process and to adequately represent this interaction in regulatory procedures assessing the performance of child restraints.
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Availability:
- Find a library where document is available. Order URL: http://worldcat.org/oclc/49192340
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Supplemental Notes:
- Abstract reprinted with permission from Taylor & Francis
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Authors:
- Jermakian, Jessica S
- Locey, Caitlin M
- Haughey, Lexie J
- Arbogast, Kristy B
- Publication Date: 2007
Language
- English
Media Info
- Media Type: Print
- Features: Figures; References; Tables;
- Pagination: pp. 171-179
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Serial:
- Traffic Injury Prevention
- Volume: 8
- Issue Number: 2
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis
- ISSN: 1538-9588
- Serial URL: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/15389588.html
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Biophysics; Child restraint systems; Children; Crash injuries; Crash injury research; Crashes; Forward facing restraint systems; Lower extremities; Motor vehicles; Policy, legislation and regulation; Risk assessment; Seat backs
- Identifier Terms: Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards
- Uncontrolled Terms: Anthropomorphic test devices; Tibia
- Subject Areas: Highways; Research; Safety and Human Factors; Vehicles and Equipment; I83: Accidents and the Human Factor; I91: Vehicle Design and Safety;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01055385
- Record Type: Publication
- Files: TRIS
- Created Date: Jul 30 2007 3:42PM