AI Article Synopsis

  • Catastrophic cervical spine injuries in rugby often happen during tackles, but the exact causes are not fully understood, with neck hyperflexion and buckling being suggested factors.
  • This study explored how the position of a player’s head and neck before impact affects the forces and movements in the neck during a head-first tackle, using a detailed computer simulation model of a rugby player.
  • Results showed that an extended neck position can lead to dangerous loads that might cause serious injuries, while a flexed neck position does not exceed safe limits, providing insights for improving safety in rugby through injury prevention strategies or rule changes.

Article Abstract

Catastrophic cervical spine injuries in rugby often occur during tackling. The underlying mechanisms leading to these injuries remain unclear, with neck hyperflexion and buckling both proposed as the causative factor in the injury prevention literature. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of pre-impact head-neck posture on intervertebral neck loads and motions during a head-first rugby tackle. Using a validated, subject-specific musculoskeletal model of a rugby player, and computer simulations driven by in vivo and in vitro data, we examined the dynamic response of the cervical spine under such impact conditions. The simulations demonstrated that the initial head-neck sagittal-plane posture affected intervertebral loads and kinematics, with an extended neck resulting in buckling and supraphysiologic intervertebral shear and flexion loads and motions, typical of bilateral facet dislocation injuries. In contrast, an initially flexed neck increased axial compression forces and flexion angles without exceeding intervertebral physiological limits. These findings provide objective evidence that can inform injury prevention strategies or rugby law changes to improve the safety of the game of rugby.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11511737PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10439-024-03576-zDOI Listing

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