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Journal ArticleDOI

Head injury mechanisms in helmet-protected motorcyclists: prospective multicenter study.

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TLDR
A modification of the design of the helmet shell may have a preventative effect on DFE lesions, which are caused by a high amount of direct force transfer, which is an important and underestimated factor.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In a prospective study, three research groups at Hannover (H) and Munich (M) in Germany and Glasgow (G) in the United Kingdom collected data from motorcycle crashes between July 1996 and July 1998 to investigate head injury mechanisms in helmet-protected motorcyclists. METHODS: The head lesions of motorcyclists with Abbreviated Injury Score-Head (AISHead) 2+ injuries and/or helmet impact were classified into direct force effect (DFE) and indirect force effect (IFE) lesions. The effecting forces and the force consequences were analyzed in detail. RESULTS: Two-hundred twenty-six motorcyclists (H, n = 115; M, n = 56; and G, n = 55) were included. Collision opponents were cars (57.8%), trucks (8.0%), pedestrians (2.3%), bicycles (1.4%), two-wheel motor vehicles (0.8%), and others (4.2%). In 25.4% no other moving object was involved. The mean impact speed was 55 km/h (range, 0-120 km/h) and correlated with AISHead. Seventy-six (33%) motorcyclists had no head injury, 21% (n = 48) AISHead 1, and 46% (n = 103) AISHead 2+. Four hundred nine head lesions were further classified: 36.9% DFE and 63.1% IFE. Lesions included 20.5% bone, 51.3% brain, and 28.1% skin. The most frequent brain lesions were subdural hematomas (22.4%, n = 47) and subarachnoid hematomas (25.2%, n = 53). Lesions of skin or bone were mainly DFE lesions, whereas brain lesions were mostly IFE lesions. CONCLUSION: A modification of the design of the helmet shell may have a preventative effect on DFE lesions, which are caused by a high amount of direct force transfer. Acceleration or deceleration forces induce IFE lesions, particularly rotation, which is an important and underestimated factor. The reduction of the effecting forces and the kinetic consequences should be a goal for future motorcycle helmet generations.

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Why most traumatic brain injuries are not caused by linear acceleration but skull fractures are

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Motorcycle helmets--a state of the art review.

TL;DR: In a non-restrictive, and never up-to-date report, a state-of-art review on road helmets safety is done, with a special insight into brain injury, helmet design and standards.
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Effectiveness of different types of motorcycle helmets and effects of their improper use on head injuries

TL;DR: Of the three helmet types, half-coverage helmets provided motorcyclists the least protection from head injuries, and wearing a loosely fastened helmet may compromise any potential protection.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of the 1992 California motorcycle helmet use law on motorcycle crash fatalities and injuries.

TL;DR: Enactment of an unrestricted helmet law significantly reduces the incidence of motorcycle crash fatalities and the number and severity of head injuries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motorcycle helmet use and injury outcome and hospitalization costs from crashes in Washington State

TL;DR: Although unhelmeted motorcyclists were only slightly more likely to be hospitalized overall, they were more severely injured, nearly three timesMore likely to have been head injured, and nearly four times more likelyto have been severely or critically head injured than helmeted riders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patterns of injury in helmeted and nonhelmeted motorcyclists

TL;DR: The incidence of severe brain injury was 600 percent higher for patients riding without a helmet and the incidence of all brain injuries was nearly twice as high in the nonhelmeted riders.
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