This invention relates to facial support cradles which are adapted for facilitation of prone positioning and support of patients or subjects upon medical examination tables, physical therapy tables, and massage tables.
Persons undergoing medical treatment, physical therapy, chiropractic treatment, or massage therapy often lie in a prone or face down position upon a padded table or bench, such table having a head end which is equipped with a facial cradle. During a subject's prone positioned use of such table and facial cradle combination, the subject typically places his or her face directly against upper cushioned surfaces of the facial cradle, the subject viewing therethrough downwardly. Such patients or subjects who lie prone upon such tables often experience anxiety and stress resulting from performance of medical examinations, physical therapy, or chiropractic procedures and manipulations. During prone body positioning, such procedures are typically performed outside of the view of the patient or subject, resulting in stress and anxiety. Conventionally designed and configured table mounted facial cradles tend to aggravate or exacerbate such anxiety and stress by enclosing the subject's face and by acting as blinders which restrict the subject's view to the floor and block peripheral vision.
The instant inventive facial cradle solves or ameliorates the above drawbacks and deficiencies of conventionally configured facial cradles by incorporating specially configured structures which mechanically exert upward contact and pressure against a subject user's facial glabellar point.
Human facial anatomy includes a glabella or glabellar point which is located at the intersection of a subject's sagittal plane and a transverse plane situated at the subject's left and right cranial supra-orbital processes. Anatomy underlying the facial glabellar point comprises the cranium's glabellar suture which is situated immediately posterior to the cranial frontal suture and immediately anterior to the internasal suture. Procerus muscles overlie the cranial glabellar suture, and one or more sub-branches of the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal nerve typically underlie the glabellar point.
Light percussive contact or tapping exerted against a subject's facial glabellar point is known in the medical arts to produce a glabellar reflex which consists of involuntary closure of eyes. In the acupressure arts, light massaging pressure applied to a subject's glabellar point is understood to effect a lessening of anxiety and to induce relaxation and a state of calm. The instant inventive facial cradle advantageously produces similar contact with and pressure against a patient or subject's facial glabellar point while simultaneously providing face and head support. A cushion component performs such dual head support and glabellar contact functions by providing a laterally extending column section which figuratively corresponds with the column portion of a “E”, and by providing left, right, and medial arms, each such arm having a proximal end fixedly attached to or formed wholly with the E's column section. Distal ends of the “E” cushion's left and right arms perform the facial support function while the “E” cushion's medial arm performs the glabellar point contacting function.
In a preferred embodiment, the “E” cushion's medial or center arm is configured as a “V” having a length or posterior extension which aligns the vertex of the “V” for contact with a patient's glabellar point while anterior aspects of the “E” cushion's column section comfortably support the patient's forehead.
In a preferred embodiment, the “E” cushion of the instant invention is attached to and is supported upon an examination or therapy table in a manner common to conventional facial cradles. In use of the instant inventive facial cradle, a patient or subject may rest his or her face and head against the cushioned upper surfaces of the facial cradle in a manner similar to conventional usage of facial cradles. Simultaneously with resultant face and head support, the inventive “E” cushion's medial arm contacts and presses upwardly against the subject's facial glabellar point advantageously inducing, in the manner of acupressure therapy, a state of calm and lessened anxiety.
Accordingly, objects of the instant invention include the provision of a facial cradle which incorporates structures as described above, and which arranges those structures in relation to each other in manners described above for achievement of the beneficial functions described above.
Other and further objects, benefits, and advantages of the instant invention will become known to those skilled in the art upon review of the Detailed Description which follows, and upon review of the appended drawings.
Referring now to the drawings, and in particular to
Referring simultaneously to
Referring to
The distal displacement of or extension of the glabellar contacting medial arm end 24 from its column/arm junction 23m is preferably 1¼ inches, such length allowing, referring to
Referring simultaneously to
As a result of enhanced medial facial support provided by the medial arm 20, the width of the cushion's central opening 30 may be increased beyond the user's eye spacing, as indicated in
Referring simultaneously to
A rigid base or support plate 46 is provided for underlying support of the “E” cushion, such base 46 preferably having a medial extension 46m which directly underlies and supports the cushion's medial arm 20. The cushioning foam rubber portions of the “E” cushion are preferably fixedly bonded to the upper surface of the rigid base 46 by adhesive bond 3.
Referring to
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In use of the instant invention, referring to
While the principles of the invention have been made clear in the above illustrative embodiment, those skilled in the art may make modifications in the structure, arrangement, portions and components of the invention without departing from those principles. Accordingly, it is intended that the description and drawings be interpreted as illustrative and not in the limiting sense, and that the invention be given a scope at least commensurate with the appended claims.
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