1. Field of the Invention
The present invention refers to the field of the field litter supports.
2. Description of the Related Art
As it is known, the field litter supports, adapted to support different types of field, emergency litters, spinal boards, and scoop stretchers, substantially comprise a frame equipped with big wheels, characterized by the fact it can be packaged in order to be easily transported.
Unfortunately, the packaging step of the litter supports of the prior art is time consuming because it is necessary each time to remove the wheels and put them in another place, in some litter support types, in a suitable compartment which is formed in the closed structure, in other types.
This steps of connecting or disconnecting the wheels from the frame, besides the fact they are provided with fast attaching and detaching systems, slow the steps of preparing the litter support, and are rather troublesome.
It is an object of the present invention to solve the above mentioned problems by providing a further litter support adapted to be folded in a simple way and without removing its wheels.
Therefore, the main advantage consists of having a litter support which is certainly more handy than the litter support of the prior art, by keeping at the same time the size of the folded litter supports of the prior art.
Said objects and advantages are all met by the field litter support, object of the present invention, which is characterized by what is recited in the attached claims.
This and other characteristics will be better pointed out by the following description of a preferred embodiment shown, as an exemplifying and non limiting example, in the attached drawings.
Particularly referring to the figures, 1 generally indicates a field litter support of the type comprising a frame 40 equipped with at least two wheels 4 and connecting devices 38a, 38b, 38c and 38d for attaching a litter 100 (an emergency, field litters, spinal board or scoop stretcher) to said frame 40.
For the sake of the description simplicity, it is considered a frame 40 formed by two side structures 2 and 3, each supporting a wheel 4.
Said field litter support 1, according to the present invention, also comprises:
For the sake of simplicity, since said side structures 2 and 3 are identical, it will be described just one of the two.
The side structure 2 of the frame 4 consists of a tubular element 7 substantially forming a closed circuit. In fact, it is possible to distinguish two posts 7a connected at the top by a portion 7b having the shape of a handle and at the bottom by a portion 7c having the shape of an arc.
Wheel 4 is rotatably connected to the center of said arc-shaped portion 7c and is integral with it, in a way so that during the step of closing the device, it is not necessary to remove the wheel from its seat as it is instead done with the devices of the prior art.
The means 5 adapted to move close or away said side structures 2, 3 are formed by four rods 8, 9, 10, and 11 arranged as a pantograph, in other words, there are coupled two by two, centrally pivoted in hinge points 12 and 13 and parallelly located one to the other.
Each of said rods 8, 9, 10, and 11 has at their respective ends eyelets 8a, 8b, 9a, 9b, 10a, 10b, 11a and 11b engaging upwardly and downwardly four bars 14, 15, 16, and 17, hinged to the side structures 2 and 3, forming in this way rotating pairs. In fact, during the step of opening and/or closing the field litter support 1, by the force applied by an user to said side structures 2 and 3 of frame 40, the rods 8, 9, 10, and 11 rotate around said four bars 14, 15, 16, and 17.
As it is clearly shown in
Moreover, each bar 14 and 15 supports, approximately midway along its length, a further rod 18 and 19 respectively connected to bars 14 and 15, for example by means of hooking means or by welding.
By considering, for example, rod 18: the first half 18a from the side of the bar 14 has a cylindrical shape, while the second half 18b has the same of a half of cylinder. The same is true for the rod 19 having a first cylindrical half 19a on the side of the bar 15 and a second half 19b having the shape of a half of cylinder.
Said rods 18 and 19 are hinged one to the other in a hinge point 20 present in the corresponding second halves 18b and 19b.
It is pointed out that said rods 18 and 19, after having being rotated around the hinge point 20 and having being taken on the same horizontal axis, they jointly form only one stiff rod (
The mechanism 6 for blocking the two side structures 2, 3 is characterized by a sleeve 21 splined to the rod 19 and abutting against elastic means 26 (for example a spring) located between the rod 15 and the sleeve 21.
During the operation, when the rod 19 moves to the same horizontal axis of rod 18, the sleeve 21, urged by the elastic means 26, moves along the rod 19 and covers the hinge point 20 by blocking in this way the rotation of said rods 18 and 19. In other words, the sleeve 21 blocks the rods 18 and 19, horizontally located, and consequently blocks the same field litter support 1.
The field litter support 1 is provided with two front foldable bucks 27 and 28 and two back foldable bucks 29 and 30, which are identical, fixable to the side structures 2 and 3 by means of straps which are hinged to said bucks 27, 28, 29, and 30, the bucks can vertically rotate around the straps in order to occupy two positions corresponding to the opening and closure of the field litter support 1 (
Said bucks 27, 28, 29, and 30 are necessary if the field litter support 1 is parked for loading/unloading a litter 100, or for causing the patient to take the Trendeleburg posture on said litter 100, that is the legs are higher than the rest of the body (
Further, said front and rear bucks 27, 28, 29, and are connected two by two by a pair of tubular elements 33 hinged in the center by a hinge point 34. By acting on said pair of tubular elements 33 the litter support 1 is folded (as shown in
A side base 41 integral with the pair of tubular elements 33, and outwardly projecting from at least one of said two bucks 27 and 28, enables the operator to quicker and easier close the litter support 1 by simply pushing it by a foot. Therefore, by applying a force to said base 41, since the base is integrally connected to one of said two tubular elements of the pair of tubular elements 33, the tubular element, integral with the base, rotates around the hinge point 34 and it rotates also the second tubular element.
In other words, in order to take the Trendeleburg or anti-Trendeleburg postures, it is necessary that the field litter support 1 is forwardly or backwardly unbalanced. In order to obtain this goal, in an example of the embodiment the rear bucks 29 and 30 can be extended so that the front portion of the field litter support 1 is higher, in other words where the laid down patient has the legs.
Said extension mechanisms 36, 37 can be obviously located on the front bucks 27 and 28 rather than on the rear bucks 29 and 30. In the same way, it is possible to provide one extension mechanism for each bucks 27, 28, 29, and 30, this solution falling anyway in the scope of the attached claims.
Four devices 38a, 38b, 38c, and 38d for hooking the litter are fixable to the handle-shaped portion 7b of each side structures 2 and 3. It can be noted that these devices are located in the horizontal area of the portions 7b of the side structures 2 and 3 in order to stably fixing a litter 100.
Since said hooking devices 38a, 38b, 38c, and 38d are identical, it will be described just one for simplicity.
Device 38a generally comprises two substantially tubular elements 42a and 43a parallelly and specularly located one on the other, connected one to the other in order to form a vice (
The upper element 42a has a first hole 44a on the shortest side, located inside the litter support 1, and a second through hole 45a on the longest sides.
Said first hole 44a is used in the open arrangement when it is desired to support some spinal boards. In fact, the hole 44a acts as a seat for one of the two ends of a telescopic rod 46 located between the two side structures 2 and 3 orthogonally to the latter.
In other words, as it is clearly shown in
Instead, through holes 45a, 45b, 45c, and 45d are provided for receiving said telescopic rods 46 and 47 both when they are not necessary (therefore as a function of the type of litter to be positioned), and when the litter support 1 is folded. In the example shown in
As it is shown in figures, each element 42a, 42b, 42c, 42d has a seat 48a fixedly receiving a telescopic bar adapted to be grasped by the user, as a handle.
In the attached figures, there are two telescopic bars 50 and 51 respectively hooked to the elements 42a 42b, and elements 42d 42c.
The hooking device 38a further provides an arm 52a having a C-shape downwardly hinged to the outer end of the element 43a around which said arm 52a can rotate in order to cover two main operative positions for respectively hooking and releasing the litter 100. Particularly, an element, for example a spring (not shown in figures), contained in the element 43a, enables the C-shaped arm 52a to enter and exit the two mentioned positions.
Said hooking devices 38a, 38b, 38c, and 38d can be easily and intuitively used by any user.
Instead,
Lastly, according to the present invention, it is possible to hook to the handle-shaped portions 7b of each side structures 2 and 3, a bar 53 and 54 for hooking fluid distributors and accessories (
It is pointed out that, thanks to said bars 53 and 54, said litter supports 1 form an autonomous operative medical unit, because, unlike the prior art, advantageously, it is not necessary a further accessories-holder trolley and a further user for moving said trolley. Since the field litter support 1, object of the present invention, has the possibility to also transport the accessories necessary for medical operations, it also enables a reduction of the authorized personnel.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PR2011A0059 | Jun 2011 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4964650 | Dickinson | Oct 1990 | A |
6976696 | O'Krangley et al. | Dec 2005 | B2 |
7044496 | Holmes | May 2006 | B2 |
7448632 | Nieto | Nov 2008 | B1 |
7547037 | Poppinga et al. | Jun 2009 | B2 |
7766365 | Darling, III | Aug 2010 | B2 |
20090165208 | Reed et al. | Jul 2009 | A1 |
20110049841 | Limontini | Mar 2011 | A1 |
20110099717 | Windauer | May 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
168874 | Apr 1934 | CH |
Entry |
---|
Search Report dated Feb. 9, 2012 in corresponding Italian Application PR20110059. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20130001907 A1 | Jan 2013 | US |