The Influence of Fall Direction and Hip Protector on Fracture Risk: FE Model Predictions Driven by Experimental Data
Abstract
Hip fractures in older adults, which often lead to lasting impairments and an increased risk of mortality, are a major public health concern. Hip fracture risk is multi-factorial, affected by the risk of falling, the load acting on the femur, and the load the femur can withstand. This study investigates the influence of impact direction on hip fracture risk and hip protector efficacy. We simulated falls for 4 subjects, in 7 different impact directions (15 degrees and 30 degrees anterior, lateral, and 15 degrees, 30 degrees, 60 degrees, and 90 degrees posterior) at two different impact velocities (2.1 and 3.1 m/s), all with and without hip protector, using previously validated biofidelic finite element models. We found the highest number of fractures and highest fragility ratios in lateral and 15 degrees posterior impacts. The hip protector attenuated femur forces by 23-49 % for slim subjects under impact directions that resulted in fractures (30 degrees anterior to 30 degrees posterior). The hip protector prevented all fractures (6/6) for 2.1 m/s impacts, but only 10% of fractures for 3.1 m/s impacts. Our results provide evidence that, regarding hip fracture risk, posterior-lateral impacts are as dangerous as lateral impacts, and they support the efficacy of soft-shell hip protectors for anterior- and posterior-lateral impacts. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000532558Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Annals of Biomedical EngineeringVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
SpringerSubject
Femur; Bone; Finite element model; Impact; Hip protector; Elderly; Impact directionOrganisational unit
03915 - Ferguson, Stephen / Ferguson, Stephen
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