SAE Technical Paper Series 2001
DOI: 10.4271/2001-22-0006
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Material Properties for Modeling Traumatic Aortic Rupture

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Cited by 19 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Despite the lack of aortic injury in the cadaver tests presented here, internal pressure measurements exceeded the expected burst pressure of the aorta (approximately 101 kPa, Bass et al, 2001) in many cases. The pressureinduced stress in the aortic wall depends on the difference between the pressure inside the aorta and the pressure in ARTICLE IN PRESS Fig.…”
Section: Article In Pressmentioning
confidence: 70%
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“…Despite the lack of aortic injury in the cadaver tests presented here, internal pressure measurements exceeded the expected burst pressure of the aorta (approximately 101 kPa, Bass et al, 2001) in many cases. The pressureinduced stress in the aortic wall depends on the difference between the pressure inside the aorta and the pressure in ARTICLE IN PRESS Fig.…”
Section: Article In Pressmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…During half of these tests, the intra-aortic fluid pressure exceeded the expected injury tolerance (Bass et al, 2001), but the differential pressure across the aortic wall may not have exceeded the injury tolerance (in most cases) due to simultaneous increases in extra-aortic pressure. The determination of the true tolerance of the aorta to thoracic acceleration requires further investigation at higher accelerations, however the accelerations imposed here were not sufficient to cause aortic injury in the cadavers tested.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…The peak pressure recorded in the thoracic aorta was 79.3 6 16.0 kPa (595 6 120 mmHg), while the peak pressure measured in the aortic arch was 58. 8 Table 2). …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 94%