Chun, I Y; Mao, X; Breedlove, E L; Leverenz, L J; Nauman, E A; Talavage, T M
DTI Detection of Longitudinal WM Abnormalities Due to Accumulated Head Impacts Journal Article
In: Developmental Neuropsychology, vol. 40, no. 2, pp. 92–97, 2015.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: *Athletic Injuries/pa [Pathology], *Craniocerebral Trauma/pp [Physiopathology], *Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging/mt [Methods], *Football/in [Injuries], *White Matter/ab [Abnormalities], *White Matter/pp [Physiopathology], Adolescent, Athletes, Brain Concussion/di [Diagnosis], Brain Concussion/pp [Physiopathology], Brain/pp [Physiopathology], Brain/ra [Radiography], Craniocerebral Trauma/di [Diagnosis], Head, Humans, Schools, Time Factors, White Matter/pa [Pathology]
@article{Chun2015,
title = {DTI Detection of Longitudinal WM Abnormalities Due to Accumulated Head Impacts},
author = {Chun, I Y and Mao, X and Breedlove, E L and Leverenz, L J and Nauman, E A and Talavage, T M},
year = {2015},
date = {2015-01-01},
journal = {Developmental Neuropsychology},
volume = {40},
number = {2},
pages = {92--97},
abstract = {Longitudinal evaluation using diffusion-weighted imaging and collision event monitoring was performed on high school athletes who participate in American football. Observed changes in white matter health were suggestive of injury and found to be correlated with accumulation of head collision events during practices and games.},
keywords = {*Athletic Injuries/pa [Pathology], *Craniocerebral Trauma/pp [Physiopathology], *Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging/mt [Methods], *Football/in [Injuries], *White Matter/ab [Abnormalities], *White Matter/pp [Physiopathology], Adolescent, Athletes, Brain Concussion/di [Diagnosis], Brain Concussion/pp [Physiopathology], Brain/pp [Physiopathology], Brain/ra [Radiography], Craniocerebral Trauma/di [Diagnosis], Head, Humans, Schools, Time Factors, White Matter/pa [Pathology]},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
King, A I
Fundamentals of impact biomechanics: Part I--Biomechanics of the head, neck, and thorax Journal Article
In: Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering, vol. 2, pp. 55–81, 2000.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: *Biomechanical Phenomena, *Craniocerebral Trauma/pp [Physiopathology], *Neck Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], *Thoracic Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], Animals, Biomedical Engineering, Brain Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], Humans
@article{King2000,
title = {Fundamentals of impact biomechanics: Part I--Biomechanics of the head, neck, and thorax},
author = {King, A I},
year = {2000},
date = {2000-01-01},
journal = {Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering},
volume = {2},
pages = {55--81},
abstract = {This is the first of two chapters dealing with some 60 years of accumulated knowledge in the field of impact biomechanics. The regions covered in this first chapter are the head, neck, and thorax. The next chapter will discuss the abdomen, pelvis, and the lower extremities. Although the principal thrust of the research has been toward the mitigation of injuries sustained by automotive crash victims, the results of this research have applications in aircraft safety, contact sports, and protection of military personnel and civilians from intentional injury, such as in the use of nonlethal weapons. The reader should be keenly aware of the wide variation in human response and tolerance data in the cited results. This is due primarily to the large biological variation among humans and to the effects of aging. Average values are useful in design but cannot be applied to individuals. [References: 94]},
keywords = {*Biomechanical Phenomena, *Craniocerebral Trauma/pp [Physiopathology], *Neck Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], *Thoracic Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], Animals, Biomedical Engineering, Brain Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Chun, I Y; Mao, X; Breedlove, E L; Leverenz, L J; Nauman, E A; Talavage, T M
DTI Detection of Longitudinal WM Abnormalities Due to Accumulated Head Impacts Journal Article
In: Developmental Neuropsychology, vol. 40, no. 2, pp. 92–97, 2015.
@article{Chun2015,
title = {DTI Detection of Longitudinal WM Abnormalities Due to Accumulated Head Impacts},
author = {Chun, I Y and Mao, X and Breedlove, E L and Leverenz, L J and Nauman, E A and Talavage, T M},
year = {2015},
date = {2015-01-01},
journal = {Developmental Neuropsychology},
volume = {40},
number = {2},
pages = {92--97},
abstract = {Longitudinal evaluation using diffusion-weighted imaging and collision event monitoring was performed on high school athletes who participate in American football. Observed changes in white matter health were suggestive of injury and found to be correlated with accumulation of head collision events during practices and games.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
King, A I
Fundamentals of impact biomechanics: Part I--Biomechanics of the head, neck, and thorax Journal Article
In: Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering, vol. 2, pp. 55–81, 2000.
@article{King2000,
title = {Fundamentals of impact biomechanics: Part I--Biomechanics of the head, neck, and thorax},
author = {King, A I},
year = {2000},
date = {2000-01-01},
journal = {Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering},
volume = {2},
pages = {55--81},
abstract = {This is the first of two chapters dealing with some 60 years of accumulated knowledge in the field of impact biomechanics. The regions covered in this first chapter are the head, neck, and thorax. The next chapter will discuss the abdomen, pelvis, and the lower extremities. Although the principal thrust of the research has been toward the mitigation of injuries sustained by automotive crash victims, the results of this research have applications in aircraft safety, contact sports, and protection of military personnel and civilians from intentional injury, such as in the use of nonlethal weapons. The reader should be keenly aware of the wide variation in human response and tolerance data in the cited results. This is due primarily to the large biological variation among humans and to the effects of aging. Average values are useful in design but cannot be applied to individuals. [References: 94]},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Chun, I Y; Mao, X; Breedlove, E L; Leverenz, L J; Nauman, E A; Talavage, T M
DTI Detection of Longitudinal WM Abnormalities Due to Accumulated Head Impacts Journal Article
In: Developmental Neuropsychology, vol. 40, no. 2, pp. 92–97, 2015.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: *Athletic Injuries/pa [Pathology], *Craniocerebral Trauma/pp [Physiopathology], *Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging/mt [Methods], *Football/in [Injuries], *White Matter/ab [Abnormalities], *White Matter/pp [Physiopathology], Adolescent, Athletes, Brain Concussion/di [Diagnosis], Brain Concussion/pp [Physiopathology], Brain/pp [Physiopathology], Brain/ra [Radiography], Craniocerebral Trauma/di [Diagnosis], Head, Humans, Schools, Time Factors, White Matter/pa [Pathology]
@article{Chun2015,
title = {DTI Detection of Longitudinal WM Abnormalities Due to Accumulated Head Impacts},
author = {Chun, I Y and Mao, X and Breedlove, E L and Leverenz, L J and Nauman, E A and Talavage, T M},
year = {2015},
date = {2015-01-01},
journal = {Developmental Neuropsychology},
volume = {40},
number = {2},
pages = {92--97},
abstract = {Longitudinal evaluation using diffusion-weighted imaging and collision event monitoring was performed on high school athletes who participate in American football. Observed changes in white matter health were suggestive of injury and found to be correlated with accumulation of head collision events during practices and games.},
keywords = {*Athletic Injuries/pa [Pathology], *Craniocerebral Trauma/pp [Physiopathology], *Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging/mt [Methods], *Football/in [Injuries], *White Matter/ab [Abnormalities], *White Matter/pp [Physiopathology], Adolescent, Athletes, Brain Concussion/di [Diagnosis], Brain Concussion/pp [Physiopathology], Brain/pp [Physiopathology], Brain/ra [Radiography], Craniocerebral Trauma/di [Diagnosis], Head, Humans, Schools, Time Factors, White Matter/pa [Pathology]},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
King, A I
Fundamentals of impact biomechanics: Part I--Biomechanics of the head, neck, and thorax Journal Article
In: Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering, vol. 2, pp. 55–81, 2000.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: *Biomechanical Phenomena, *Craniocerebral Trauma/pp [Physiopathology], *Neck Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], *Thoracic Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], Animals, Biomedical Engineering, Brain Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], Humans
@article{King2000,
title = {Fundamentals of impact biomechanics: Part I--Biomechanics of the head, neck, and thorax},
author = {King, A I},
year = {2000},
date = {2000-01-01},
journal = {Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering},
volume = {2},
pages = {55--81},
abstract = {This is the first of two chapters dealing with some 60 years of accumulated knowledge in the field of impact biomechanics. The regions covered in this first chapter are the head, neck, and thorax. The next chapter will discuss the abdomen, pelvis, and the lower extremities. Although the principal thrust of the research has been toward the mitigation of injuries sustained by automotive crash victims, the results of this research have applications in aircraft safety, contact sports, and protection of military personnel and civilians from intentional injury, such as in the use of nonlethal weapons. The reader should be keenly aware of the wide variation in human response and tolerance data in the cited results. This is due primarily to the large biological variation among humans and to the effects of aging. Average values are useful in design but cannot be applied to individuals. [References: 94]},
keywords = {*Biomechanical Phenomena, *Craniocerebral Trauma/pp [Physiopathology], *Neck Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], *Thoracic Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], Animals, Biomedical Engineering, Brain Injuries/pp [Physiopathology], Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}