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Football helmet impact standards in relation to on-field impacts

机译:橄榄球头盔与现场撞击有关的撞击标准

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摘要

Youth football helmets currently undergo the same impact testing and must satisfy the same criteria as varsity helmets, although youth football players differ from their adult counterparts in anthropometry, physiology, and impact exposure. This study aimed to relate football helmet standards testing to on-field head impact magnitudes for youth and varsity football helmets. Head impact data, filtered to include only impacts to locations in the current National Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment standard, were collected for 48 collegiate players (ages 18–23 years) and 25 youth players (ages 9–11 years) using helmet-mounted accelerometer arrays. These on-field data were compared to a series of National Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment standard drop tests with a youth and varsity Riddell Speed helmet. In the on-field data, the adult players had a higher frequency of impact than the youth players, and a significant difference in head acceleration magnitude only existed at the top location (p < 0.001). In the laboratory drop tests, the only significant difference between the youth and varsity helmets was at the 3.46 m/s (61 cm) impact to the front location (p = 0.0421). Drop tests generated head accelerations within the top 10% of measured on-field impacts, at all locations and drop heights, demonstrating that drop tests are representative of the most severe head impacts experienced by youth and adult football players on the field. Current standards have been very effective at eliminating skull fracture and severe brain injury in both populations. This analysis suggests that there is not currently a need for a youth-specific drop test standard. However, there may be such a need if helmet testing standards are updated to address concussion, paired with a better understanding of differences in concussion tolerance between youth and adult populations.
机译:尽管青少年足球运动员在人体测量学,生理学和冲击暴露方面与成人同龄人有所不同,但青少年橄榄球头盔目前仍接受与大学橄榄球头盔相同的冲击测试,并且必须满足相同的标准。这项研究旨在将橄榄球头盔标准测试与青少年和大学橄榄球头盔的现场头部撞击幅度联系起来。头部冲击数据经过过滤,仅包括对当前国家运动器材标准操作委员会标准中位置的影响,使用头盔收集了48名大学球员(18至23岁)和25名青年运动员(9至11岁)的头部冲击数据安装的加速度计阵列。将这些现场数据与一系列国家体育标准委员会的操作设备进行了一系列比较,这些标准是使用青年和大学Riddell Speed头盔进行的跌落测试。在现场数据中,成年选手的撞击频率高于青年选手,并且头部加速度的显着差异仅存在于顶部位置(p <0.001)。在实验室跌落测试中,青年头盔和大学头盔之间的唯一显着差异是对正面位置的冲击力为3.46 m / s(61厘米)(p = 0.0421)。跌落测试在所有位置和跌落高度上,在所测得的现场撞击的前10%内产生的头部加速度,表明跌落测试代表了青年和成年足球运动员在场上经历的最严重的头部撞击。当前的标准在消除这两个人群的颅骨骨折和严重脑损伤方面非常有效。该分析表明,目前不需要青年专用的跌落测试标准。但是,可能需要更新头盔测试标准以应对脑震荡,并更好地了解青年和成人人群的脑震荡耐受性差异。

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