TY - JOUR PY - 2022// TI - Biomechanical evaluation of back injuries during typical snowboarding backward falls JO - Scandinavian journal of medicine and science in sports A1 - Wei, Wei A1 - Evin, Morgane A1 - Bailly, Nicolas A1 - Arnoux, Pierre-Jean SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - To prevent spinal and back injuries in snowboarding, back protector devices (BPDs) have been increasingly used. The biomechanical knowledge for the BPD design and evaluation remains to be explored in snowboarding accident conditions. This study aims to evaluate back-to-snow impact conditions and the associated back injury mechanisms in typical snowboarding backward falls. A previously-validated snowboarder multi-body model was first used to evaluate the impact zones on the back and the corresponding impact velocities in a total of 324 snowboarding backward falls. The biomechanical responses during back-to-snow impacts were then evaluated by applying the back-to-snow impact velocity to a full human body finite element model to fall on the snow ground of three levels of stiffness (soft, hard, and icy snow). The mean values of back-to-snow normal and tangential impact velocities were 2.4m/s and 7.3m/s with maximum values up to 4.8m/s and 18.5m/s. The lower spine had the highest normal impact velocity during snowboarding backward falls. The thoracic spine was found more likely to exceed the limits of flexion-extension range of motions than the lumbar spine during back-to-snow impacts, indicating a higher injury risk. On the hard and icy snow, rib cage and vertebral fractures were predicted at the costal cartilage and the posterior elements of the vertebrae. Despite the possible back injuries, the back-to-snow impact force was always lower than the force thresholds of the current BPD testing standard. The current work provides additional biomechanical knowledge for the future design of back protections for snowboarders.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0905-7188 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/sms.14254 ID - ref1 ER -