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Dive into the research topics where Chiara Bo is active.

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Featured researches published by Chiara Bo.


SHOCK COMPRESSION OF CONDENSED MATTER - 2011: Proceedings of the Conference of the American Physical Society Topical Group on Shock Compression of Condensed Matter | 2012

PROSPECTS FOR STUDYING HOW HIGH-INTENSITY COMPRESSION WAVES CAUSE DAMAGE IN HUMAN BLAST INJURIES

Katherine A. Brown; Chiara Bo; Spyros D. Masouros; Arul Ramasamy; Nicolas Newell; Timothy J. Bonner; Jens Balzer; Adam M. Hill; Jon C. Clasper; Anthony M. J. Bull; William Proud

Since World War I, explosions have accounted for over 70% of all injuries in conflict. With the development of improved personnel protection of the torso, improved medical care and faster aeromedical evacuation, casualties are surviving with more severe injuries to the extremities. Understanding the processes involved in the transfer of blast-induced shock waves through biological tissues is essential for supporting efforts aimed at mitigating and treating blast injury. Given the inherent heterogeneities in the human body, we argue that studying these processes demands a highly integrated approach requiring expertise in shock physics, biomechanics and fundamental biological processes. This multidisciplinary systems approach enables one to develop the experimental framework for investigating the material properties of human tissues that are subjected to high compression waves in blast conditions and the fundamental cellular processes altered by this type of stimuli. Ultimately, we hope to use the information gained from these studies in translational research aimed at developing improved protection for those at risk and improved clinical outcomes for those who have been injured from a blast wave.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2014

Integrated experimental platforms to study blast injuries: a bottom-up approach

Chiara Bo; A. Williams; Sara M. Rankin; William Proud; Katherine A. Brown

We are developing experimental models of blast injury using data from live biological samples. An integrated research strategy is followed to study material and biological properties of cells, tissues and organs, that are subjected to dynamic and static pressures, relevant to those of battlefield blast. We have developed a confined Split Hopkinson Pressure Bar (SHPB) system, which allows cells, either in suspension or as a monolayer, to be subjected to compression waves with pressures on the order of a few MPa and durations of hundreds of microseconds. The chamber design enables recovery of biological samples for cellular and molecular analysis. The SHPB platform, coupled with Quasi-Static experiments, is used to determine stress-strain curves of soft biological tissues under compression at low, medium and high strain rates. Tissue samples are examined, using histological techniques, to study macro- and microscopic changes induced by compression waves. In addition, a shock tube enables application of single or multiple air blasts with pressures on the order of kPa and a few milliseconds duration; this platform was used for initial studies on mesenchymal stem cells responses to blast pressures.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2014

Mechanical and histological characterization of trachea tissue subjected to blast-type pressures

B. J. Butler; Chiara Bo; Alexander W. Tucker; A. P. Jardine; William Proud; A. Williams; Katherine A. Brown

Injuries to the respiratory system can be a component of polytrauma in blast-loading injuries. Tissues located at air-liquid interfaces, including such tissues in the respiratory system, are particularly vulnerable to damage by blast overpressures. There is a lack of information about the mechanical and cellular responses that contribute to the damage of this class of tissues subjected to the high strain rates associated with blast loading. Here, we describe the results of dynamic blast-like pressure loading tests at high strain rates on freshly harvested ex vivo trachea tissue specimens.


Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A-physical Metallurgy and Materials Science | 2015

The High-Strain Rate Loading of Structural Biological Materials

William Proud; T.-T. N. Nguyen; Chiara Bo; B. J. Butler; R. L. Boddy; Alun Williams; Spyros D. Masouros; Katherine A. Brown

The human body can be subjected to violent acceleration as a result of explosion caused by military ordinance or accident. Blast waves cause injury and blunt trauma can be produced by violent impact of objects against the human body. The long-term clinical manifestations of blast injury can be significantly different in nature and extent to those suffering less aggressive insult. Similarly, the damage seen in lower limbs from those injured in explosion incidents is in general more severe than those falling from height. These phenomena increase the need for knowledge of the short- and long-term effect of transient mechanical loading to the biological structures of the human body. This paper gives an overview of some of the results of collaborative investigation into blast injury. The requirement for time-resolved data, appropriate mechanical modeling, materials characterization and biological effects is presented. The use of a range of loading platforms, universal testing machines, drop weights, Hopkinson bars, and bespoke traumatic injury simulators are given.


SHOCK COMPRESSION OF CONDENSED MATTER - 2011: Proceedings of the Conference of the American Physical Society Topical Group on Shock Compression of Condensed Matter | 2012

Cellular characterization of compression-induceddamage in live biological samples

Chiara Bo; Jens Balzer; Mark Hahnel; Sara M. Rankin; Katherine A. Brown; William Proud

Understanding the damage that high intensity compression waves induce in human tissues is critical for developing improved therapies for patients suffering from blast injuries. Experimentally based models of blast injury using live biological samples are needed. In this study we have developed a system to directly assess the effects of dynamic loading conditions on live cells. Here, we describe a confinement chamber designed to subject live cell cultures in a liquid environment to high intensity compression waves using a split Hopkinson pressure bar system. Signals from the strain gauges mounted on the bars and the chamber allow the measurement of parameters such as pressure and duration of the stimulus. The chamber itself also allows recovery of cells subjected to compression for assessment of cellular damage. In these studies we present evidence of increased levels of damage and loss of cellular integrity in cultured mouse mesenchymal stem cells subjected to a high-intensity compression wave with a peak...


European Physical Journal-applied Physics | 2011

Development of a chamber to investigate high-intensity compression waves upon live cell cultures

Chiara Bo; J. Balzer; Katherine A. Brown; S.M. Walley; William Proud


Bioinspired, biomimetic and nanobiomaterials | 2015

Composite nature of fresh skin revealed during compression

Benjamin J. Butler; Rachael L. Boddy; Chiara Bo; Hari Arora; Alun Williams; William Proud; Katherine A. Brown


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2011

Cellular characterization of compression induced-damage in live biological samples

Chiara Bo; Jens Balzer; Mark Hahnel; Sara M. Rankin; Katherine A. Brown; William Proud


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Development of Experimental Tissue Models for Blast Injury

Benjamin J. Butler; Chiara Bo; Alun Williams; Andy Jardine; Katherine A. Brown


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Mechanical response of porcine skin under compression from low to high strain rates

Chiara Bo; B. J. Butler; Alun Williams; Katherine A. Brown; William Proud

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Sara M. Rankin

National Institutes of Health

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B. J. Butler

Imperial College London

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A. Williams

University of Cambridge

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Adam M. Hill

Imperial College London

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