法医骨断裂学

Angi M. Christensen, J. Rickman, H. Berryman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

断口学涉及研究材料中的断裂和裂纹,以了解失效的原因。即使作为一种复杂的、高度分层的复合材料,骨头也是一种遵循物理定律的材料,包括开裂行为。因此,断口学和断裂力学领域对我们理解骨对载荷和力的反应有很大的帮助。在这里,我们讨论了如何使用断口学来评估由包括弹丸在内的撞击引起的骨折。通常与冲击创伤相关的骨折和骨折模式——包括桡骨骨折、周向骨折和斜面骨折——在法医分析中被描述和解释使用;然而,其产生和安排的机制在充分理解创伤事件时往往未得到充分利用。本文从断口学的角度对这些机制进行了综述。此外,对新数据的回顾表明,与冲击有关的骨斜面,特别是与弹丸有关的,是由锥体开裂产生的,这一过程在其他脆性材料中也有很好的记录。这些信息可用于加强对一般冲击创伤的理解,也可用于具体的法医案件。此外,在断裂力学和断口学的背景下描述和解释骨骼创伤具有将法医人类学中使用的术语与其他科学领域(特别是涉及材料失效研究的领域)使用的术语保持一致的优势。为了方便这种对齐,我们提供了各种断口学相关术语的讨论和定义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Forensic Fractography of Bone
Fractography involves the study of fractures and cracks in a material in order to understand the cause of failure. Even as a complex, highly hierarchical composite, bone is a material that obeys physical laws, including cracking behavior. The fields of fractography and fracture mechanics, therefore, have much to offer in our understanding of bone’s response to loading and force. Here we discuss how fractography can be used in the assessment of fractures originating from impacts including those from projectiles. Fractures and fracture patterns frequently associated with impact trauma—including radial fractures, circumferential fractures, and beveling—are described and used interpretively in forensic analyses; however, the mechanisms for their production and arrangement are often underutilized in fully understanding the trauma event. These mechanisms are reviewed here from a fractography perspective. Furthermore, a review is presented of new data indicating that beveling in bone associated with impacts, especially with projectiles, is produced by cone cracking, a process that is also well documented in other brittle materials. This information can be used to enhance understanding of impact trauma in general, as well as in the context of specific forensic cases. Moreover, describing and interpreting skeletal trauma within the context of fracture mechanics and fractography has the advantage of aligning the nomenclature used in forensic anthropology with that used in other scientific fields, particularly those involved in the study of material failure. To facilitate this alignment, we provide discussion and definitions for various fractography-related terms.
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