The present invention relates to an air mattress, and in particular to an air mattress capable of preventing the occurrence of decubitus ulcers in a person lying on the air mattress.
Conventionally, an air mattress for preventing decubitus ulcers such as that disclosed in patent document 1 and 2 is known. Patent document 1 discloses an air mattress formed by a plurality of bladder-shaped air cells disposed upon a base sheet, wherein all of the air cells are divided into an upper layer and a lower layer by a divider, and all of the air cells are respectively inflated or deflated in the upper layers and lower layers thereof.
Patent document 2 discloses a technique of providing a plurality of air cells within the interior of a retaining member formed from an elastic material so as to line up in the lengthwise direction of the air mattress and adjusting the pressure within the air cells, thereby preventing decubitus ulcers.
Patent document 3 discloses a technique of preventing repelling force from being placed by a mattress upon a location of a person lying on the air mattress at which decubitus ulcers have occurred, and discloses lining up multiple cuboid air cells in the lengthwise direction and widthwise direction of an air mattress, attaching a magnetic marker to a location of a person at which decubitus ulcers have occurred, detecting the position of the marker by means of a magnetic sensor provided in each of the air cells, and reducing the pressure in the air cells corresponding to the position of the detected marker.
Patent Document 1: Registered Japanese Utility Model No. 3115039
Patent document 2: Unexamined Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2000-189288
Patent document 3: Unexamined Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2007-144007
However, the following problems are present in the above described prior art. The air mattress according to patent document 1 is configured so that all of the air cells are inflated and deflated in upper layers and lower layers thereof. As such, the repelling force placed by the mattress upon the buttock area of the person lying on the air mattress is great, and the occurrence of decubitus ulcers cannot be completely prevented.
The air mattress according to patent document 2 is configured so that the pressure inside all of the air cells is identical. As such, as in the case of patent document 1, the repelling force placed by the mattress upon the buttock area of the person lying on the air mattress is great, and the occurrence of decubitus ulcers cannot be completely prevented.
The technique according to patent document 3 is for preventing repelling force from being placed by the mattress upon a specific location at which decubitus ulcers have occurred, and is not for preventing the occurrence of decubitus ulcers.
An object of the present invention is to provide an air mattress capable of preventing the occurrence of decubitus ulcers in a person lying on the air mattress.
The air mattress according to the present invention has a plurality of air cell groups made from a plurality of bladder-shaped cells and lined up with respect to the lengthwise direction of the air mattress so as to support at least a head area, shoulder area, back area, buttock, thigh area, knee area, and heel area of a person lying on the air mattress; an air supply/release pump; an air tube connecting the bladder-shaped cells and the air supply/release pump in one or a plurality of independent first systems for each of the air cell groups out of the air cell groups and one or a plurality of independent second systems for each of specific bladder-shaped cells out of the plurality of air cell groups; and a controller for controlling air supply/release by the air supply/release pump to the first systems and second systems; and the controller performs a control so that the pressure in at least those air cell groups out of the air cell groups to which air is supplied via the first system corresponding to the back area and thigh area of the person lying on the air mattress is greater than the pressure in the air cell groups corresponding to the buttock area.
In the air mattress according to the present invention, the controller performs a control so that, for instance, the pressure in the air cell groups corresponding to the head area and heel area of the person lying on the air mattress is maintained at a fixed level. Alternatively, the controller controls pressure so that, for instance, the pressure in the air cell groups corresponding to the head area of the person lying on the air mattress is maintained at a fixed level, and the air cell groups corresponding to the heel area are repeatedly inflated and deflated.
In the air mattress described above, the bladder-shaped cells of the air cell groups are, for example, rod-shaped cells extending in the widthwise direction of the air mattress, and the bladder-shaped cells are configured so as to be lined up in the lengthwise direction of the air mattress.
each of the air cell groups corresponding to, for example, the back area, buttock area, and thigh area has a lower section of bladder-shaped cells and an upper section of bladder-shaped cells; the lower section bladder-shaped cells are connected to the first system via the air tube; the pressure of the air cell groups corresponding to the back area and thigh area is maintained at a fixed level greater than the pressure in the air cell groups corresponding to the buttock area; each of the bladder-shaped cells in each of the air cell groups corresponding to the shoulder area, knee area, as well as the upper section of the back area, buttock area, and thigh area, are connected to one system out of the plurality of the second systems via the air tube; and each of the air cell groups is controlled so as to repeatedly inflate and deflate in order for each of the systems.
Another air mattress according to the present has a plurality of air cell groups made from a plurality of bladder-shaped cells and lined up with respect to the lengthwise direction of the air mattress so as to support at least a head area, shoulder area, back area, buttock, thigh area, knee area, and heel area of a person lying on the air mattress, an air supply/release pump, an air tube connecting the bladder-shaped cells and the air supply/release pump in a plurality of independent systems for each of the air cell groups out of the air cell groups, and a controller for controlling air supply/release by the air supply/release pump to the plurality of systems; and the controller performs a control so that the pressure in at least those air cell groups, out of the air cell groups to which air is supplied via the air tube, corresponding to the back area and thigh area of the person lying on the air mattress is greater than the pressure in the air cell groups corresponding to the buttock area.
In the air mattress according to the present invention, the controller performs a control so that the pressure in the air cell groups corresponding to the back area and thigh area is greater than the pressure in the air cell groups corresponding to the buttock area. It is thereby possible to stably support the buttock area of a person from both sides thereof using the air cell groups for the back area and the thigh area, and to disperse body pressure. It is thus possible to prevent the repelling force placed upon the buttock area of the person on the air mattress by the air mattress from growing large and decubitus ulcers from occurring.
a) and 7(b) are views of an air tube-side connector of an air mattress according to an embodiment of the present invention from a mating surface side thereof;
a) through 8(c) are partial plan views illustrating a process of removing a connector of an air mattress according to an embodiment of the present invention;
Hereafter follows a detailed description of an air mattress according to an embodiment of the present invention with reference to the attached drawings.
First, the configuration of the air mattress according to the present embodiment will be described. As shown in
As shown in
each of the bladder-shaped cells 17 of air cell groups 10c through 10e corresponding to the back area, buttock area, and thigh area of the person on the mattress are divided into, as shown for example in
In the present embodiment, as shown in
As shown in
An air supply/release pump 11 is disposed within the space in which bladder-shaped cells 17 are not disposed so that the lengthwise direction thereof is, for example, perpendicular to the lengthwise direction of each of the bladder-shaped cells 17; i.e., so that the lengthwise direction is oriented in the direction from the head area to the heel area of the person lying on the air mattress. The air supply/release pump 11 is thereby disposed in a corner out of the four corners of the air mattress 1, which is configured so as to describe a rectangle as a whole when seen in a plan view, that corresponds to the heel area of the person lying on the air mattress. The part corresponding to the side of the heel area is a part that the body of the user of the air mattress does not readily contact even if the user turns over while sleeping, so that sleeping comfort is not reduced. It is also possible to cover the exterior surface of the air supply/release pump 11 with a flexible member of, for example, urethane so that, even when the heel of the person on the air mattress is positioned over the air supply/release pump 11 due to the person rolling over or the like, the flexible member acts as a cushion, thereby preventing a reduction in comfort. It is also possible to protect the air supply/release pump 11 from shocks from the heel using the flexible member. The flexible member used is preferably a member with high body pressure dispersibility. This also enables the risk of decubitus ulcer occurrence to be reduced. Because the air supply/release pump 11 is disposed at a part corresponding to the heel area of the air mattress user, the comfort of the mattress user is not negatively affected by the operating noise of the pump. Furthermore, by disposing the air supply/release pump 11 in an area within the range of the width and length of the air mattress made from the plurality of air cell groups 10, there is no need to dispose the pump 11 externally with respect to the air mattress, and ease of handling is obtained. The height of the air supply/release pump 11 is, for example, equal to or less than that of the bladder-shaped cells 17 of each of the air cell groups 10, creating a configuration in which it is possible to prevent the air supply/release pump 11, which is harder than each of the air-filled bladder-shaped cells 17, from jutting out beyond the air cell groups 10 in the height direction, as well as to prevent the position of the person lying on the air mattress from being higher than that of the side rails when the air mattress is placed on a bed having, for example, side rails.
In the present embodiment, as shown in
As shown in
In the present embodiment, as shown in
As shown in
The present embodiment is configured so that, when the connectors 12 are removed from the air supply/release pump 11 as shown in
As shown in
Next, the operation of the air mattress according to the present embodiment will be described. In the present embodiment, when, for example, a switch of the hand switch 16 is operated, an input signal from the hand switch 16 is first inputted to the mattress control circuit 15 via the cord on the end of the air supply/release pump. The mattress control circuit 15 then controls, for example, the rate of rotation of the fan within the air supply/release pump 11 on the basis of the received signal. The amount of air supplied and released to and from the air tubes 13 connected to each of the air supply/release systems of the air supply/release pump is thereby controlled, in turn controlling the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells 17 connected to the air tubes 13 of each of the air supply systems.
At this time, the mattress control circuit 15 controls the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells corresponding to each of the air tubes 13 connected, for example, to the four block control air supply systems so that the pressure is constantly at a fixed amount. In other words, when the body weight of the person lying on the air mattress is, for example, from 30 to 135 kg, each of the air cell groups is separately controlled so that the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of air cell group 10a, which corresponds to the person's head area, is for example from 1.6 to 4.3 kPa; the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of air cell group 10g, which corresponds to the person's heel area, is for example from 1.1 to 3.0 kPa; the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of the lower sections of air cell group 10c and 10e (system A), which correspond to the person's back area and thigh area, is for example from 1.5 to 6.4 kPa; and the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of the lower section of air cell group 10d (system B), which corresponds to the person's buttock area, is for example from 1.1 to 3.3 kPa. By controlling the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of the air cell groups 10a, 10g corresponding to the head area and the heel area of the person lying on the air mattress so that the pressure is a fixed amount, it is possible to stably support the locations corresponding to bones protruding outward from the back area of the body of the mattress user (the occipital bone and calcaneal bone) when the user is in a reclined state. By controlling the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of the lower sections of air cell group 10c and 10e (system A), which correspond to the back area and thigh area of the person, so as to be greater than the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of the lower section of air cell group 10d (system B), which corresponds to the buttock area, it is possible to stably support the buttock area, which protrudes toward the mattress and thus receives a larger load of the body's weight compared to other locations when the user is in a reclined state, from both sides, i.e., using the bladder-shaped cells of air cell group 10c and 10e, which correspond to the back area and the thigh area; this in turn enables the promotion of body pressure dispersion and the prevention of the repelling force placed by the air mattress on the buttock area of the person on the air mattress from becoming too great and decubitus ulcers from occurring. In cases where the air cell group 10g corresponding to the heel area is configured so as to repeatedly inflate and deflate, it is possible to stably support the location corresponding to the occipital bone of the person using the head area air cell group 10a in which the pressure is maintained at a constant level, reduce the repelling force placed by the air mattress on the buttock area by supporting the buttock area from both sides thereof using the back area and thigh area air cell groups 10c, 10e, and switch the part supporting the heel area between the thigh and the heel at a fixed interval using the repeatedly inflating and deflating heel area air cell group, preventing repelling force from being placed by the mattress on the heel of the person for long periods of time.
Meanwhile, for example, with regards to the air tube 13 of the three alternating inflation/deflation air intake/release systems, the mattress control circuit 15 first sets the amount of air supplied to the air tube 13 of the air intake/release system of system 1 to an amount smaller than the amount supplied to the air tubes 13 of the air intake/release systems of system 2 and system 3, and sets the amount of air being supplied to the air tubes 13 of system 2 and system 3 to roughly equal levels. The pressure within the bladder-shaped cells 17 connected to the air tubes of system 1 thereby becomes the smallest, and the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells 17 connected to the air tubes of system 2 becomes roughly equal to the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells 17 connected to the air tubes of system 3 and greater than the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of system 1. At this time, in cases where a pressure sensor is provided in the bladder-shaped cells 17 of each of the systems, the mattress control circuit 15 increases or reduces the amount of air supplied to each of the systems on the basis of the values measured by the pressure sensors as appropriate, allowing the internal pressure within the bladder-shaped cells 17 connected to each of the systems to be rapidly set to a predetermined set value.
After maintaining the internal pressure of the bladder-shaped cells 17 connected to the air tubes 13 of each of the three alternating inflation/deflation systems in this state for a predetermined period of, for example, 460 seconds or less, the mattress control circuit 15 controls the amount of air supplied or released by the seven air supply/release systems, thereby increasing the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of system 1, decreasing the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of system 2, and maintaining the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of system 3 at a fixed level. During a pressure transition period of, for example, 170 seconds or less, the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells 17 of system 2 thereby becomes the smallest, and the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of system 1 and the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of system 3 become roughly equal to each other and greater than the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of system 2. The pressure within the bladder-shaped cells corresponding to the head area, back area (lower section), buttock area (lower section), thigh area (lower section), and heel area are maintained at a fixed level. In cases where the air cell group 10g for the heel area is configured so as to repeatedly inflate and deflate, air is supplied, for example, for sixty seconds to the bladder-shaped cells corresponding to the heel area when the cells are in, for example, a deflated state (in which the internal pressure is, for example, approximately 0.5 kPa) so as to inflate the bladder-shaped cells (to an internal pressure of, for example from 1.1 to 3.0 kPa). Then, with the bladder-shaped cells corresponding to the heel area in an inflated state, after maintaining the internal pressure, for example, for 800 seconds, the air within the cells is released, for example, for ten seconds, deflating the bladder-shaped cells. Then, with the bladder-shaped cells corresponding to the heel area in a deflated state, the internal pressure is maintained, for example, for 870 seconds, and air is once again supplied to the interior of the cells.
In this state, the mattress control circuit 15 controls the internal pressure of each of the bladder-shaped cells 17 according to a method similar to that described above. In other words, the mattress control circuit 15 controls the pressure within each of the bladder-shaped cells by controlling amount of air being supplied or released by the seven air supply/release systems after a predetermined period of, for example, 460 seconds or less so that, during a pressure transition period of 170 seconds or less, the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of system 3 becomes the smallest, and the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of system 1 and the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of system 2 become roughly equal to each other and greater than the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of system 3. The pressure within the bladder-shaped cells corresponding to the head area, back area (lower section), buttock area (lower section), thigh area (lower section), and heel area are maintained at a fixed level. Internal pressure control as described above can also be performed in cases where the air cell group 10g corresponding to the heel area is configured so as to repeatedly inflate and deflate.
By controlling the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells connected to the air tubes 13 of each of the air supply/release systems, it is possible to vary over time the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of the air cell groups 10 corresponding to the soft parts where the skin contacts the surface of the mattress, i.e., the shoulder area, back area, buttock area, thigh area, and knee area of a person when the person is in a reclined state, thereby preventing the same amount of pressure from being placed on specific parts of the skin for long periods of time, and thus decubitus ulcers from occurring.
When performing medical or caretaking work upon a person on the air mattress, a caretaker or the like can, for example, stop the decubitus ulcer prevention function of the air mattress by operating the hand switch 16. In other words, after the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells connected to the air tubes 13 of each of the systems has been set to a pressure suitable for medical or caretaking work or the like, the pressure is either maintained at the set pressure, or the pressure within all of the bladder-shaped cells 17 is set to the same level and maintained at the set pressure.
In the air mattress 1 according to the present embodiment, the air supply/release pump 11 is internal to the mattress, so that the air supply/release pump does not get in the way, improving the ease of performing medical or caretaking work and reducing the amount of space in which the air supply/release pump 11 is provided.
When it becomes necessary to perform emergency medical treatment, such as cardiopulmonary resuscitation, upon a person on the air mattress, the elasticity of the air mattress may impede medical treatment. When this happens, the air tubes 13 are detached from the air supply/release pump. In the air mattress 1 according to the present embodiment, the air tubes 13 are connected to the air supply/release pump 11 by the connector 12. As shown in
When the air mattress 1 is set, for example, upon a bed, and there is a need to move the person on the air mattress along with the bed, after, for example, a transport mode switch provided on the hand switch is pressed, a plug at the tip of the power cord of the air supply/release pump 11 is removed from a power supply course such as, for example, an electrical socket. The air supply/release pump 11 is configured so that, by pushing the transport mode button on the hand switch, the air release ports are closed so that air is not released from, for example, each of the air supply/release systems, and the pressure within each of the bladder-shaped cells is maintained at a fixed level. Large depressions due to depressurization of the bladder-shaped cells when the mattress user is being transported are prevented, and thus the occurrence of decubitus ulcers due to the buttock area of the mattress user being compressed by the frame of the bed is prevented.
In the air mattress 1 according to the present embodiment, because the air supply/release pump 11 is disposed at a corner of the mattress, it is easy to contact the air supply/release pump 11 when performing maintenance upon the air supply/release pump 11 and the air tubes 13 when the air mattress is not in use. In this case, when the air tubes 13 are detached from the air supply/release pump 11, if the air supply/release pump 11 is configured so as to be removable from the mattress, maintenance of the air supply/release pump 11 and the air tubes 13 becomes even easier.
In the present embodiment, as described above, the mattress control circuit 15 performs a control so as to maintain the pressure within the air cell groups 10 corresponding to the head area and heel area of a person lying on the air mattress 1 at a fixed level, and to set the pressure within the air cell groups 10c, 10e corresponding to the back area and thigh area to a level greater than the pressure within the air cell group 10d corresponding to the buttock area. It is thereby possible to stably support the buttock area of the person on the mattress from both sides by means of the air cell groups 10c, 10e corresponding to the back area and thigh area with the person being stably supported by the air cell groups 10a, 10g corresponding to the head area and heel area, and to disperse body pressure. It is thus possible to prevent the repelling force placed upon the buttock area of the person on the air mattress by the air mattress from growing large and decubitus ulcers from occurring. In cases where the air cell group 10g corresponding to the heel area is configured so as to repeatedly inflate and deflate, it is possible to stably support the location corresponding to the occipital bone of the person using the head area air cell group 10a in which the pressure is maintained at a constant level, reduce the repelling force placed by the air mattress on the buttock area by supporting the buttock area from both sides thereof by means of the back area and thigh area air cell groups 10c, 10e, and switch the part supporting the heel area between the thigh and the heel at a fixed interval using the repeatedly inflating and deflating heel area air cell group, preventing repelling force from being placed by the mattress on the heel of the person for long periods of time.
It is also possible to vary over time the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells of the air cell groups 10 corresponding to the soft parts where the skin contacts the surface of the mattress, i.e., the shoulder area, back area, buttock area, thigh area, and knee area of a person when the person is in a reclined state, thereby preventing the same amount of pressure from being placed on specific parts of the skin for long periods of time, and thus decubitus ulcers from occurring.
In the present embodiment, the effects of the present invention can also be obtained even when the alternating inflation/deflation function is operated because control is performed so that the pressure within the air cell groups for the back area and the thigh area is set to a higher level than the pressure within the air cell groups for the buttock area. An air mattress having an alternating inflation/deflation function was described for the present embodiment, but the air mattress of the present invention need not have an alternating inflation/deflation function. Specifically, the present embodiment is configured, as shown in
Next, an air mattress according to a second embodiment of the present invention will be described. As shown in
In the present embodiment, the mattress control circuit 15 is connected to the control circuit 2a of the electric bed 2, and the back raising angle of the back frame is input as a signal via, for example, the control circuit 2a of the electric bed. It is configured to then control, for example, the rate of rotation of the fan for each of the air supply/release systems of the air supply/release pump 11 according to the back raising angle on the basis of the back raising angle signal so that, for example, a predetermined pressure value is obtained, thus controlling the pressure within each of the bladder-shaped cells connected to the eight air supply/release systems. The rest of the configuration is identical to that of the first embodiment.
Next, the operation of the air mattress according to the present embodiment will be described. In the present embodiment, when the bed hand switch 2c of the electric bed 2 is operated, a command from the bed hand switch is first inputted to the control circuit 2a of the electric bed 2. The electric bed control circuit 2a then decides the distance to advance or retract the piston rod on the tip of the actuator 2b according to the signal from the bed hand switch, thereby deciding the back raising angle of the back frame. Next, the electric bed control circuit 2a sends the signal regarding the back raising angle of the back frame to the mattress control circuit 15. The mattress control circuit 15 thereby decides the optimal pressure for each of the bladder-shaped cells connected to each of the air supply/release systems according to the inputted back raising angle signal. At this time, the mattress control circuit 15 controls the internal pressure of each of the bladder-shaped cells 17 connected to each of the air supply/release systems so that the pressure in air cell groups 10c, 10e, corresponding to the back area and thigh area, is higher than the pressure within air cell group 10d, corresponding to the buttock area, and furthermore so that the pressure within the air cell group 10d corresponding to the buttock area increases as the angle to which the back frame is raised increases.
Next, the electric bed control circuit 2a operates the actuator 2b by, for example, supplying power to the actuator 2b. The mattress control circuit 15 also controls, for example, the rate of rotation of the fans of the air supply/release pump 11 corresponding to each of the air supply/release systems, thereby controlling the air supply/release amount for each of the air supply/release systems so that the pressure within the bladder-shaped cells connected to each of the air supply/release systems becomes a predetermined pressure. The internal pressure of the bladder-shaped cells corresponding to each of the air supply/release systems is thereby set to an optimal value when the back frame of the electric bed 2 has been raised or lowered so as to reach a predetermined back raising angle. The value set for the internal pressure of the bladder-shaped cells is a pressure such that the body weight of the person on the air mattress is dispersed evenly over the mattress, and, for example, large localized pressure is not placed upon the mattress user and the mattress user does not feel as though there is a foreign object present or experience other types of discomfort; and is set to a value experienced in experiments or the like. In the present embodiment as well, as in the case of the first embodiment, the mattress control circuit 15 performs a control so that the internal pressure of the bladder-shaped cells in air cell groups 10a, 10g corresponding to the head area and heel area of the person lying on the air mattress is fixed. Alternatively, the mattress control circuit 15 controls the internal pressure of the bladder-shaped cells of air cell group 10g corresponding to the heel area so that the bladder-shaped cells repeatedly inflate and deflate. A control is also performed so that the internal pressure of the bladder-shaped cells in air cell groups 10c, 10e (system A) corresponding to the back area and thigh area of the person is greater than the internal pressure of the bladder-shaped cells in air cell group 10d (system B) corresponding to the buttock area. The pressure within air cell groups 10c, 10e corresponding to the back area and thigh area is also controlled so that the pressure within each of the air cells increases as the angle to which the back frame is raised increases.
In the present embodiment, the mattress control circuit 15 performs a control so that the pressure in the air cell groups supporting the back area and thigh area of the person lying on the air mattress 1 (air cell groups 10c and 10e, respectively) increases when the back frame of the bed is in a raised state. It is thereby possible to stably support the buttock area of the person on the air mattress from both sides thereof using the air cell groups supporting the back area and thigh area of the person even when the back frame of the bed has been raised, obtaining the effects of the present invention. It is also possible to prevent a large localized pressure from being placed upon the air mattress 1 corresponding to the buttock area of the person and mattress compression, in which that part of the air mattress 1 corresponding to the buttock area of the person is compressed and greatly caves in, from occurring even when the back frame of the bed is raised, as well as to stably support the mattress user.
In the present embodiment, because it is not the pressure in the air cell group 10d supporting the buttock area of the person lying on the air mattress 1, but rather the pressure in the air cell groups (10c and 10e, respectively) supporting the back area and thigh area on both sides of the buttock area, that is increased when the back frame is raised, it is possible to effectively distribute body pressure using the air mattress without the repelling force from the air mattress placed upon the buttock area of the area increasing and comfort being reduced.
Furthermore, in the present embodiment, because the mattress control circuit 15 controls the pressure of each of the air cell groups so that the pressure within the air cell group 10d corresponding to the buttock area increases as the angle to which the back frame is raised increases, it is possible to obtain the effects described above regardless of the back raising angle.
It is also possible in the present embodiment to obtain an air mattress configured so that the pressure within each of the bladder-shaped cells is continuously altered when the back frame of the bed 2 is raised.
It is also possible to obtain the effects described above regardless of the body weight of the person lying on the air mattress by configuring the air mattress of the present embodiment as described below. Specifically, a configuration is adopted in which body weight can be inputted into the hand switch 16, and control is performed so that the mattress control circuit 15 increases the pressure within each of the air cell groups the greater the body weight of the person. By configuring the air mattress in this way, it is possible to prevent mattress cave-in at, for example, a position corresponding to the buttock area from being larger, for example, in the case of a person with a high body weight than in the case of a person with a low body weight.
In this case, as shown for example in
The present invention is an air mattress capable of stably supporting the buttock area of a person from both sides thereof and of dispersing body pressure, thereby preventing the repelling force placed by the air mattress upon the buttock area of the person on the air mattress from growing large and decubitus ulcers from occurring, and is thus useful in preventing decubitus ulcers.
1 air mattress
10 air cell group
11 air supply/release pump
110 connector (air supply/release pump side)
110
a air supply/release mouths
12 connector (air tube side)
12
a air supply/release terminal
12
b connector cover
12
c rubber seal
13 air tube
14 top cover
15 mattress control circuit
16 hand switch
2 electric bed
2
a electric bed control circuit
2
b actuator
2
c electric bed hand switch
23 load sensor
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-024853 | Feb 2010 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2010/068302 | 10/19/2010 | WO | 00 | 8/1/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2011/096114 | 8/11/2011 | WO | A |
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