The present invention relates to any shoe (for example, an athletic cleat) that is composed of two separate components that can detach from one another in order to reduce/prevent knee injury to the wearer.
U.S. Pat. No. 9,273,827 mentions:
U.S. Pat. No. 9,273,827 goes on to describe a counterforce technique. The present inventors contend that from the standpoint of a musculoskeletal radiologist, the use of the counterforce technique in U.S. Pat. No. 9,273,827 would actually result in increased injuries based on biomechanics. Instead of pursuing such a technique based on a counter force, it seems preferable to the present inventors to allow the original force to take the leg in the direction it naturally wants to travel.
The present inventors are aware of medical studies on cadaveric knees to determine how much internal torque is required to tear an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). They found that somewhere between 10-20 N-m of internal torque tore most ACLs. They also found that when most ACLs are torn, there is a downward force on the foot of about 360 lbs for the average man.
According to U.S. Pat. No. 6,035,559, a rotating platform may be applied to the underside of footwear. Its purpose would be
The purpose of a cleat is to allow the athlete to plant into the ground and it is normal to then have a bit of a rotational force (but you don't want the foot to move). Having a rotating platform would not be appealing to the athlete, as it would introduce an unnatural motion of spinning around (seemingly even with normal movements). Although this potentially could reduce the risk of injury, it is different from how the present inventors envision their cleat to function to reduce injury.
Preferably, the cleat should function exactly how a standard cleat functions under normal circumstances. However, when the foot is both planted and there is a significant rotational force, the front spikes would dissociate, preventing injury. An ACL tear is the most devastating knee injury in sports. It occurs most commonly from a pivot shift injury (planted foot with a rotational force). The mechanism envisioned by the present inventors stops pivot shift injuries.
Knee injuries often occur in sports where cleats are used in a downward force oriented relatively perpendicular to the ground by the athlete's own weight, resulting in planting of the cleats to varying degrees into the dirt, followed by a significant pivoting force around the planted foot. Mild twisting will stress the ligaments of the knee but will result in no actual injury. Moderate twisting will result in ligamentous sprains. Severe twisting will result in torn ligaments. It would be desirable to devise a mechanism that prevents such injury such as a torn ACL in the event such pivoting forces arise.
The present invention relates to a mechanism in a sports shoe that prevents or minimizes injury from rotative or twisting forces. It does this by dissociating a detachable component from the sports shoe in response to a rotative or twisting force imposed on the foot that exceeds a threshold of safety to avoid knee injury.
The detachable component (henceforth referred to as the “scaffold”) is affixed to the front portion of the sole of the shoe. The scaffold is able to detach when a downward, as well as a rotational force is applied. The scaffold component can easily be reattached to the remainder of the shoe after the rotational event, such that both components return to their original orientation. The scaffold can be used to affix a variety of materials to the shoe, including but not limited to spikes (as in the example of an athletic cleat), rubber (for example, to create a sneaker with this functionality), or any other materials depending on the desired practical function of the shoe.
The scaffold and shoe can be attached to one another through a variety of mechanisms. The commonality of these attachment mechanisms is that they maintain attachment under normal playing conditions, but allow for dissociation when a pivot shift type force (downward force and rotational force at the same time) is applied to the foot. Proposed mechanisms for attachment include: industrial strength fabric meshes of interlocking hooks and pile (VELCRO), magnetic contact points, deformable locking pins, interlocking snaps, curved strips and recesses and an interlocking pin and snap, a spring that exerts a spring force, and a locking mechanism similar to what is commonly used in spin biking.
For a better understanding of the present invention, reference is made to the following description and accompanying drawings, while the scope of the invention is set forth in the appended claims.
The current invention requires that both a downward force and a rotational force occur about the foot in order for the scaffold component to dissociate from the remainder of shoe at a critical amount of torque. Research studies have shown that ligamentous injury about the knee tends to occur when a rotational force of greater than 20-25 N-m occurs. This invention requires that the two components stay married at forces less than 20-25 N-m, but dissociate at forces greater than 20-25 N-m.
Given the importance of having light weight athletic cleats, the mechanism of attachment of the scaffold to the remainder of the shoe must be light and sleek. The favored mechanism is industrial strength interlocking hook and file fabric under the tradename VELCRO. In accordance with the present invention the front spikes can dissociate from the remainder of the athletic sports shoe in order to prevent knee injury.
Turning to the embodiment of
In use, consider a situation of
If desired, the amount of the hook and pile meshes on the scaffold to interlock can be adjusted in order to alter the force at which the cleated scaffold 20 dissociates from the athletic sports shoe 10.
Turning to the further embodiment of
An additional embodiment of
With respect to two embodiments, namely, that of
First phase: A weight 102 is attached to one end of a lever beam 104 in order to create 360 lbs of downward pressure. A vertical metal rod 106 of 36 cm in length was used to represent the average length of a man's lower leg bone, which is 36 cm. Attached to the top of the vertical metal rod 106 is a place for a torque meter so as to apply and measure an internal torque. The vertical metal rod 106 was then attached to a shaped piece of wood 110 (in the shape of an adult foot) that had cooperative fabric meshes attached to the underside. On the wooden platform 112, the corresponding cleated scaffold 20 is attached thereto via cooperative fabric meshes. The cooperative fabric meshes complement each other to effect attachment, e.g., interlocking hooks and pile.
A torque wrench 108 (with torque meter) is attached to the top of the vertical metal rod 106. A manual force is applied to the torque wrench 108 in an effort to pivot the vertical metal rod 106 from the orientation of
Second phase: Thereafter, the vertical metal rod 106 is attached to the fully developed cleat in the manner shown in
In both phases of testing, the amount of fabric meshes of interlocking hooks and pile (VELCRO) are tailored to achieve the correct point at which the scaffold 20 dissociates from the shoe 10. It is preferable that the scaffold 20 dissociate from the shoe 10 when a pivoting force is exerted from the shoe relative to the scaffold that is within twenty-five percent below a magnitude of the critical pivoting force that is capable of tearing the ACL. Since medical literature has shown that most ACLs tear at a twisting force of 20-25 (the threshold or critical force) one may design the shoe to dissociate from the scaffold at a force just below this range, let's say 18, which is 20% below the twisting force of 20. Forces below or weaker than 18 would keep the components together. Forces stronger or greater than 18 would cause the components to come apart.
While the athletic sports shoe is mentioned throughout, any kind of footwear may be equipped with any of the mechanisms mentioned. Indeed, the mechanisms are designed with pairs of cooperative components that, when in alignment with each other, retain the scaffold to the underside of the sole of the shoe body of the footwear provided there is an absence of a critical pivoting force. The critical pivoting force is one capable of tearing an anterior cruciate ligament of the person wearing the shoe.
However, the pairs of the cooperative components are configured and arranged to allow for dissociation of the scaffold from the underside of the sole of the footwear when the cleats of the scaffold become planted to resist movement of the scaffold in unison with the shoe and a critical pivoting force is about to be reached.
Depending upon the embodiment, the cooperative components are the interlocking hook and pile, the interlocking snap and pin, the magnets and magnetic contacts that attract each other, the curved strips and the recesses that slide one into another, and the metal spring that exerts a spring force against another cooperative component. All such cooperative components are structured and operative in a conventional manner to effect attachment. Their release from attachment depends upon the strength of their retention force to remain in an attached state so that they enter a non-cooperative position. Thus, the concept is to configure the cooperative components to give way or release or detach from each other in response to a pivoting force whose magnitude is approaching that of being equal to or greater than the critical pivoting force, which would otherwise be likely to lead to knee injury if reached. In some embodiments, the cooperative components may complement each other and may engage each other.
Depending upon the critical pivoting force that is chosen, the shoe customer may be presented with purchasing with multiple scaffolds that differ from each other. For example, one scaffold would dissociate very close to the critical force based on medical lab studies (this would be least likely to come off during normal play, but also have the greatest risk of ACL injury). Another scaffold would be the recommended version (striking the best balance between injury prevention and dissociation during normal play). Yet another scaffold would dissociate at a lower force of the other two, which would make it more likely to come off during normal game play, but also afford the greatest degree of protection.
It is well studied from numerous medical literature publications that there are multiple risk factors for ACL tears. However, the medical literature is relatively sparse as to the threshold or critical internal twisting force required to tear an ACL, ranging from values of 10 to 33 N-m. Thus, there is some uncertainty as to the range of torques that constitute the critical pivoting force that, if reached, leads to ACL tears.
In accordance with the testing of the present invention, the inventors wanted to see if a cleated scaffold could be made that dissociated from the shoe based on any of these values for critical pivoting force. For instance, with respect to their first interlocking hooks and pile (VELCRO) layout, dissociation occurred at around 35 N-m. The inventors then trimmed the interlocking hooks and pile (VELCRO) a bit and achieved dissociation at 20-25 N-m. The inventors then trimmed it further and achieved dissociation around 15 N-m. Therefore, the inventors know that this invention can achieve dissociation based upon the range of forces cited in the literature.
There may well be a threshold/critical force at which the ACL tears and that it is variable based on the individual. Because of this, the invention can be designed variably in order to adjust the strength at which the cooperating components remain attached. The concept is to provide a cleated scaffold and shoe with cooperating components for which the scaffold dissociates from the shoe below a critical force in order to reduce ACL injuries while at the same time remaining attached during typical/normal gameplay.
While the foregoing description and drawings represent the preferred embodiments of the present invention, various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62911273 | Oct 2019 | US |