The invention relates generally to a general physical conditioning or a physical rehabilitation device. More particularly, the invention relates to an exercise device for aquatic exercises which provides resistance to a user in an aquatic environment, thereby enabling a user to more efficiently strengthen or rehabilitate muscles while performing aquatic exercises, and to a method of use for such a device.
An aquatic exercising device provides resistance against which the user exerts force during exercising while in an aquatic environment such as a swimming pool or other body of water. Aquatic exercises have increased in popularity because water exercises increase heart rate and oxygen uptake and improve muscle tone without the shock of exercising/impacting on a hard surface.
In the past, there have been pool toys such as those typically called “water noodles” which have some degree of buoyancy in water and thus allow a swimmer to support his or her body weight by laying across the pool toy, for example with the pool toy held under the arms of the swimmer. The “water noodle” is typically a highly flexible cylindrical tube 3 to 4 inches in diameter and 3 to 6 feet in length, typically made of an open or closed cell foam with a hollow interior. Thus, it is an elongated, highly flexible device which tends to bend about the swimmer's body or to bend into a “U” shape when it is used for buoyancy or aquatic activity. Due to the flexibility of the “water noodle,” it is not possible for the it to provide a sufficient resistance to achieve the improved benefits in aquatic exercise provided by the present invention.
An additional problem with many other exercise devices is their complicated designs, which are therefore expensive to manufacture. The present device is made from readily available materials and is inexpensive and is easy to manufacture.
Many other exercise devices are not properly designed to be used in an aquatic environment or as aquatic exercise tools. That is, many other exercise devices lack sufficient buoyancy to be used in an aquatic environment, are too hydrodynamic to provide resistance in an aquatic environment, are too flexible to provide sufficient resistance or stabilization for aquatic exercise, and/or are susceptible to deterioration from harsh pool chemicals or prolonged exposure to water.
From the foregoing, it will be appreciated that what is needed in the art is a versatile exercising device which is specifically adapted for aquatic use, one that flexes, but is rigid enough to provide sufficient resistance and stabilization when used for aquatic exercises.
The current invention is for an aquatic exercise device and a method for using said device for aquatic exercise and/or therapy. Very generally the device comprises an elongated hollow relatively inflexible inner tubular member which is water-tight, surrounded and retained throughout its length by an outer foam member which is relatively more flexible and made of a suitable open or closed cell foam.
More particularly the invention may be described as comprising:
an inner tubular member with an exterior wall and hollow interior cavity, said inner tubular member having a length much greater than its average diameter, said inner member having a proximal end and a distal end, and said proximal end and distal end of the inner member being water-tight;
an outer foam member with an exterior wall and an interior channel, having approximately the same length as said inner tubular member, and said channel of the outer foam member having approximately the same shape and dimensions as the exterior wall of the inner member;
said inner tubular member being more rigid than said outer foam member; and
said inner tubular member being located substantially within and retained by the channel of the outer foam member.
A more particular description of the invention briefly described above will be rendered by reference to a specific embodiment thereof which is illustrated in the appended drawings. Understanding that these drawings depict only a typical embodiment of the invention and are not therefore to be considered to be limiting of its scope, the invention will be described and explained with additional specificity and detail through the use of the accompanying drawings in which:
The present invention comprises a device for use in aquatic exercise, aquatic therapy, or both, which provides sufficient buoyancy, resistance, and stabilization when utilized for exercise or therapy in an aquatic environment. The present invention also comprises a method for improved, resistive aquatic exercise or aquatic therapy comprising aquatic use of the device for resistive aquatic exercises.
Thus, the present invention provides an aquatic exercise device comprising an elongated, buoyant, tubular structure having a flexible outer foam member, an interior wall of which defines and fully surrounds an interior hollow interior channel extending throughout the length of the outer foam member, and an inner tubular member retained in the interior channel. Each such member has a length much greater than its width or diameter. The inner member is sealed to render its internal cavity water tight, such that air is trapped inside the inner member and adds to the buoyancy of the aquatic exercise device as a whole.
The outer foam member is approximately the same length as the inner member and radially surrounds the inner member through substantially the entire length of the inner member. The outer foam member is a hollow foam member, suitably a hollow cylindrical tube. However, the cross-sectional shape of the outer foam member may be different (i.e., oval, hexagonal, square, irregular). The hollow interior channel of the outer foam member is defined by the interior body wall of the outer foam member and has approximately the same shape and dimensions as the exterior of the inner member.
The outer foam member is more flexible than the inner member. The inner member, while not required to be completely rigid, is more rigid than the outer foam member. It is sufficiently rigid to permit flexing but prevent bending when the device moves through water at a pace normally used for aquatic exercise.
The inner member is located and retained substantially within the hollow interior channel of the outer foam member that is defined by the interior wall of the outer foam member. Thus, the outer foam member surrounds the inner member throughout its length. The inner member may be held in place within the outer foam member by a number of means as described more fully below.
In another aspect of the invention, a method is provided in which the exercise device is used in an aquatic exercise program. The method of using the aquatic exercise device increases the force of buoyancy, increases range of motion, increases trunk and core musculature strength, increases lower and upper extremity strength, serves as a stable floatation device allowing for proper technique of vertical and floating exercises in the aquatic medium, increases propioceptive responses that improve appropriate muscle recruitment, and improves the specificity of aquatic exercise protocols.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will become more fully apparent from the following description and appended claims, or may be learned by the practice of the invention as set forth hereinafter.
Specifically, the present invention relates to an aquatic exercise device that provides sufficient buoyancy and resistance to movement through water to provide increases in range of motion, increases in trunk and core musculature strength, increases in lower and upper extremity strength, to serve as a stable floatation device allowing for proper technique of vertical and floating exercises in the aquatic medium, and to provide an increase in propioceptive responses that improve appropriate muscle recruitment and therefore improve specificity of exercise protocols in the water.
Due to the rigid characteristic of the invention, the device exhibits improved versatility over existing aquatic therapy devices, increasing the exercise combinations and benefits which may be obtained from aquatic therapy. Additionally, stabilization of the participant is increased due to the increase in buoyancy of the design over prior art. This increases the potential for improved exercise technique, and additionally offers non-swimmer and fearful participants, including geriatric users, the ability to exercise more safely and benefit from the exercise prescription.
Foam is a lightweight, versatile, polymer-based material. The base foam material, such as plastic or polyurethane, is “frothed up” while in a molten state and then cooled, which fills the material with countless little bubbles, giving it an appearance similar to a sponge. Foams are typically classified into two categories: open-cell and closed-cell. In closed-cell foam, each little air pocket, or cell, is completely enclosed by a thin wall. Closed cell foams are desirable for the present invention because they tend to limit absorption of water which would tend to increase weight and reduce buoyancy of the device in an aquatic environment. In open-cell foams the individual cells are interconnected and more susceptible to absorption of water. However, the absorption of water may be regulated with either of these foams by regulating the size of the individual pores or cells and/or by coating the exposed surfaces of the outer foam material. Such adaptations will be readily apparent to those skilled in the foam production art.
The foam is typically resistant to excessive water absorption and harsh pool chemicals and has good tear resistance, tensile strength, and resiliency, making the outer foam member (1) able to endure bending, twisting, and abuse. Additionally, similar lightweight, buoyant foam or foam-like materials to make the outer foam member will be apparent to one skilled in the art. The material for the outer foam member (1) may suitably be a closed-cell polyethylene foam. In one illustrative embodiment, the outer foam member (1) is made of Ethafoam® and has an outer diameter (10) of about 3 inches and a length (8) of about 54 inches.
The outer foam member (1) is shown in greater detail in
Referring to
Although it will be apparent that a wide range of values are acceptable for the inner diameter (9) of channel (15) and outer diameter (10) of the outer foam member (1), a suitable ratio of the outer diameter (10) to the inner diameter (9) is greater than about 2:5:1, for example, in the range of about 2.5:1 to about 5:1. Stated otherwise, the outer diameter or cross-section of foam member (1) may be in the range of about 2 to about 4 inches. Likewise the diameter or cross-section of the inner channel of foam member (1) corresponds to the outer diameter of the inner tubular member, such that the tubular member may be retained within the hollow cavity. This can be seen in
Referring again to
The inner member (2) may be made from a wide variety of materials so long as it is more rigid than the outer foam member (1), will flex but not bend easily or excessively, and, when adapted to be water-tight, the inner member (2) maintains a positive buoyancy. A suitable material for the inner member (2) of the present invention is polyvinyl chloride, commonly referred to as PVC.
As roughly indicated in
As mentioned above, the inner member (2) should be buoyant when its ends are capped or sealed to render it water-tight. There are many potential methods for making the inner member (2) water-tight in accordance with the instant invention. Some options include inserting a stopper or other material into the proximal and distal ends of the inner member (2) or sealing the opposing outer walls (7) of the inner member (2) to each other, thermally, mechanically, or otherwise. In one method, end caps (3) may be affixed either permanently or removeably to the proximal and distal ends of the inner member (2). Some examples of these end caps (3) are shown in
One embodiment of an end cap (3) is shown in
Another embodiment of an end cap (3) is shown in
Yet another embodiment of an end cap (3) is shown in
As mentioned above, the inner member (2) is located substantially within the hollow interior channel of the outer foam member which is defined by the interior body wall (15) of the outer foam member (1), as shown in
A method of for aquatic exercise and/or therapy is also contemplated and within the scope of the present invention, usage of the claimed aquatic exercise device is employed in resistive exercise in an aquatic environment to provide increases in range of motion, increases in trunk and core musculature strength, increases in lower and upper extremity strength, to serve as a stable floatation device allowing for proper technique of vertical and floating exercises in the aquatic medium, and to increase in propioceptive responses that improve appropriate muscle recruitment and therefore improve specificity of exercise is protocols in the water.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein with reference to specific embodiments, the invention is not intended to be limited to the details shown. Rather, various modifications may be made in the details within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims and without departing from the invention.
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20080081742 A1 | Apr 2008 | US |