Finger motion aid and rehabilitation hand having same

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 10993869
  • Patent Number
    10,993,869
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, July 3, 2018
    5 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, May 4, 2021
    3 years ago
Abstract
A rehabilitation hand including a finger motion aid. The finger motion aid includes a rubber member, wherein a finger sleeve is provided at a front end of the rubber member. The finger sleeve has an open end where a finger can extend through the open end. The rubber member can be worn on the finger by the finger sleeve. A space, which is formed by a first bridge, a last bridge, a plurality of intermediate bridges and a plurality of grooves, is provided on a front face of the rubber member and a chip is placed in the space. The rehabilitation hand includes at least one of a thumb motion aid, an index finger motion aid, a middle finger motion aid, a ring finger motion aid, a little finger motion aid, a controller and a protective gear.
Description
CROSS REFERENCE TO THE RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is the national phase entry of the International Application No. PCT/CN2018/094198, filed on Jul. 3, 2018, which is based upon and claims priority to the Chinese Patent Application No. 201710552260.3, filed on Jul. 7, 2017, wherein the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.


TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates to the technical field of joint motion assistance, and in particular to a finger assisted motion member and a rehabilitation hand device having same.


BACKGROUND

It has been clinically proven that continuous passive exercises can compensate for the lack of active exercises of a patient, increase the physical activity of the patient, and also reduce the corresponding complications after a limb surgery or during early rehabilitation and spontaneous recovery of a cranial nerve injury of the patient. In addition, there is currently a situation for a patient in which a finger is paralyzed and contracted due to a central nervous system injury such as cerebral infarction. In this situation, if a professional rehabilitation trainer or a surgeon et al. wears a rehabilitation hand device to stretch and clench fingers and then a signal of finger movement is transmitted from a chip in the rehabilitation hand device, via a transmission device, to a chip of a rehabilitation hand worn by the patient, the patient is controlled to synchronize with the person (the professional rehabilitation trainer, the surgeon or the patient himself, et al.) who actively sends out a motion signal to perform the movement of the fingers, so that the recovery process of the patient's fingers can be accelerated.


In view of the above needs, the inventor of the present invention has finally obtained the present invention after a long period of research and practices.


SUMMARY

In order to solve the above technical defects, firstly, the technical solution used by the present invention is to provide a finger motion aid, which comprises: a rubber member.


A finger sleeve is provided at a front end of the rubber member, the finger sleeve has an open end, a finger can extend through the open end, and the rubber member can be worn on the finger by means of the finger sleeve. A space, which is formed by a first bridge, a last bridge, a plurality of intermediate bridges and a plurality of grooves, is provided on a front face of the rubber member, and a chip is placed in the space. The width of the elongated space is greater than the width of the chip.


Preferably, the length of each of the first bridge and the last bridge is greater than the length of each of the intermediate bridges to prevent the chip from exiting from the first bridge and the last bridge.


Preferably, the finger sleeve has a segment of a flat surface at a position in which the finger sleeve is in contact with a finger pad for supporting the finger.


Preferably, a back side of the rubber member has a curve radian that matches the finger.


Preferably, the finger motion aid further comprises a plastic cover that is disposed on and fixedly connected to the rubber member.


Preferably, the finger motion aid further comprises a hook-and-loop fastener that is disposed underneath and fixedly connected to the rubber member.


Secondly, there is also provided a rehabilitation hand having the finger motion aid as described above. The rehabilitation hand comprises at least one of a thumb motion aid, an index finger motion aid, a middle finger motion aid, a ring finger motion aid and a little finger motion aid, and further comprises a controller and a protective gear.


The controller is disposed on and fixedly connected to the protective gear.


The controller is electrically connected to chips on the thumb motion aid, the index finger motion aid, the middle finger motion aid, the ring finger motion aid and the little finger motion aid, respectively. An active assistance signal is received by the controller and synchronously transmitted to the chips on the five finger motion aids, so that the chips on the five finger motion aids are forced to synchronously perform an action of the same intensity as performed by a professional rehabilitation person.


Hook-and-loop fasteners on the thumb motion aid, the index finger motion aid, the middle finger motion aid, the ring finger motion aid and the little finger motion aid are respectively bonded to the protective gear.


The protective gear is fixed on a wrist and a palm.


Preferably, the protective gear is embedded with a hard sheet at one end to facilitate wearing the protective gear on the wrist and the palm.


Compared with the prior art, the beneficial effects of the present invention are as follows: a finger wearing a finger motion aid is forced to perform synchronous motions as the finger motion aid provided with a chip is performing bending and stretching motions upon receipt of a signal by the chip, thus helping a patient to perform rehabilitation training; and if a rehabilitation hand having a controller, the finger motion aids and a protective gear is worn, an active motion signal is received by the controller and transmitted to chips on the finger motion aids, such that the chips perform synchronous motions according to the received active motion signal, thereby forcing the finger wearing the finger motion aid to perform synchronous motions and thus perform synchronous rehabilitation training.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

To describe the technical solutions in various embodiments of the present invention more clearly, the accompanying drawings required for describing the embodiments will be briefly introduced below.



FIG. 1 shows a structural view showing the front side of a finger motion aid in a first embodiment;



FIG. 2 shows a structural view showing the back side of the finger motion aid in the first embodiment;



FIG. 3 shows a structural view showing the front side of a rubber member in the first embodiment;



FIG. 4 shows a structural view showing the back side of the rubber member in the first embodiment;



FIG. 5 shows a structural view showing the front side of a plastic cover in the first embodiment;



FIG. 6 shows a structural view showing the back side of the plastic cover in the first embodiment;



FIG. 7 shows a structural view of a hook-and-loop fastener in the first embodiment;



FIG. 8 shows a cross-section view of the finger motion aid in the first embodiment;



FIG. 9 shows a structural view of a rehabilitation hand having finger motion aids in a second embodiment;



FIG. 10 shows a structural view of a controller in the second embodiment;



FIG. 11 shows a state diagram of a protective gear when folded in the second embodiment;



FIG. 12 shows a structural view showing the front side of the protective gear when unfolded in the second embodiment; and



FIG. 13 shows a structural view showing the back side of the protective gear when unfolded in the second embodiment.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS

The above and other technical features and advantages of the present invention are described in more detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings.


First Embodiment

A finger motion aid, as shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, comprises a rubber member 11, a plastic cover 12, a hook-and-loop fastener 13 and a chip 14.


The rubber member 11 is worn on a finger, and the chip 14 is placed in the rubber member 11. After a control signal is received by the chip 14, the rubber member 11 is controlled to bend and stretch, thereby driving a patient's finger to bend and stretch. The rubber member 11 is made of a plastic material, and because the initial state of the patient's fingers is bent, the tensile property of the rubber member 11 is required to be strong. When a retraction command is received by the chip 14 to force the rubber member 11 to retract, the patient's finger is passively stretched to do rehabilitation training, and in that case, the rubber member 11 is required to have a good retraction property.


The rubber member 11 is as shown in FIGS. 3 and 4, a finger sleeve is provided at a front end of the rubber member 11, and the rubber member 11 is worn on the patient's finger by extending same into the finger sleeve. The finger sleeve has a segment of a flat surface 117 at a position in which the finger sleeve is in contact with a finger pad for supporting the finger. The finger sleeve has an open end 111 and the patient's finger can extend from the open end 111 to facilitate enhancing the touch sense of the patient's finger. An elongated space, which is formed by a first bridge 112, a plurality of intermediate bridges 113, a plurality of grooves 114 and a last bridge 115, is provided on a front face of the rubber member 11, and the chip 14 is placed in the elongated space. The width of the elongated space is greater than the width of the chip. The rubber member 11 worn on the finger can be bent and deformed as the finger of the person is deformed and bent. The width of the elongated space being greater than the width of the chip allows reduced deformation of the chip in the elongated space. The bridge 112 and the bridge 115 are slightly longer in length, the length of the bridge 112 is in the range of approximately 12-17 mm, and the length of the bridge 115 is in the range of approximately 17-20 mm, thereby preventing the chip 14 from exiting from the bridge 112 and the bridge 115 during bending. There are at least three bridges 113 between the bridge 112 and the bridge 115 that have the width of about 6 mm. There is a groove 114 between two bridges 113 that has the width of 3 mm. The arrangement of the groove 114 is for the purpose of adding the flexibility of the rubber member 11 and thus allowing the rubber member 11 to be more closely fitted to the patient's finger during bending and stretching of the rubber member 11 so as to assist the patient's finger motion. The curve radian of a curved surface 118 on the back side of the rubber member 11 is greater than that of a curved surface 119, and the curved surface 118 is more closely fitted to the patient's finger when the rubber member 11 is bent and retracted. The curved surface 119 has a smaller curve radian and thus is convenient to fit with the hook-and-loop fastener 13.


The plastic cover 12, as shown in FIGS. 5 and 6, is used for fixing an electric wire between the chip 14 and the controller to prevent, due to the chip 14 moving together with the movement of the electric wire, the rubber member 11 from deviating from the patient's finger and affecting the assistance motion effect. The electric wire connected to the chip 14 is connected to the controller through a hole 121. A hole 122, a hole 116 and a hole 131 (as shown in FIG. 7) are fixed together by a screw, as shown in FIG. 8.


The hook-and-loop fastener 13 has a smaller curve radian and thus is convenient to be bonded with a protective gear. One side of the hook-and-loop fastener is fixedly connected to the rubber member 11 and the plastic cover 12 by the screw at the hole 131, and the other side thereof is bonded to the protective gear by means of a bonding face.


The finger motion aid suitable for each of the fingers is identical in structure, except that the length of the finger is different and thus the length of the rubber member also varies. The lengths of the fingers of a man and a woman are also different and the fingers of persons of the same gender are different depending on the heights of the persons. As long as the above-mentioned finger motion aid is made into different models, the needs of various persons can be met.


In the finger motion aid, the control signal is received by the chip, so that the chip is bent and stretched. By placing the chip into the rubber member, the rubber member worn on the patient's finger drives the patient's finger to move as the chip moves, thus assisting the patient's fingers to exercise and gradually recover to health.


Second Embodiment

A rehabilitation hand having the finger motion aid as described above, as shown in FIG. 9, comprises at least one of a thumb motion aid 1, an index finger motion aid 2, a middle finger motion aid 3, a ring finger motion aid 4 and a little finger motion aid 5, and further comprises a controller 6 and a protective gear 7.


The finger motion aids according to the first embodiment can be worn on five fingers of a hand, which are respectively referred to as the thumb motion aid 1, the index finger motion aid 2, the middle finger motion aid 3, the ring finger motion aid 4 and the little finger motion aid 5. The finger motion aids worn on the fingers are different in length because of the different lengths of the five fingers, and the differences are mainly featured by the different numbers of the bridges 113 and the grooves 114. Except for that, there is no difference in the structure for the finger motion aids. The finger motion aids are respectively bonded to the protective gear 7 by means of the hook-and-loop fasteners, are convenient to disassemble and assemble, are easy to adjust, and are suitable for various deformed fingers.


The controller 6 is positioned at the back of the hand of the protective gear 7 to facilitate operation and fixed bonding to the protective gear 7. The controller 6 is provided with five identical electric wire sockets 61, and chips on the thumb motion aid 1, the index finger motion aid 2, the middle finger motion aid 3, the ring finger motion aid 4 and the little finger motion aid 5 are respectively connected to the five electric wire sockets 61 on the controller 6 via electric wires. The controller 6 is further provided with a power switch 62 for controlling power on and off of the controller 6. The controller 6 is further provided with a power socket 63 for connecting with an external power source to energize the controller 6. The controller 6 is used to receive an active assistance signal (a professional rehabilitation person wears a rehabilitation hand to actively perform bending and stretching actions), and synchronously transmit the signal to the chips on the five finger motion aids. Upon receipt of the synchronous signal by the chips on the five finger motion aids, the bending and stretching actions of the same intensity as performed by the professional rehabilitation person are synchronously performed to do rehabilitation training.


The protective gear 7, as shown in FIGS. 11 to 13, is worn on a palm and a wrist. FIG. 11 shows a state in which the protective gear is folded and the thumb is extended from a hole 71. FIGS. 12 and 13 respectively show two states of front and back sides of the protective gear 7 when it is unfolded. On the front side, there is a hook-and-loop fastener 72. The hook-and-loop fastener 72 is bonded to the surface of the protective gear when the protective gear is folded for binding and fixation. A hard sheet 73 is embedded in one end of the protective gear to facilitate operation when the protective gear is folded and bound to the palm and the wrist and to increase the binding tightness. The hard sheet may be a hard structure, such as a steel plate or an aluminum sheet. An end portion 74 has a certain degree of curvature and is disposed such that the hook-and-loop fastener on the end portion 74 is bonded to the protective gear at a position that is close to the thumb, so as not to affect bonding of the index finger motion aid 2 to the protective gear 7. The width of a position 75 is relatively large and thus the width of an end portion 76 is reduced, so as to facilitate bonding of the thumb motion aid 1 to the protective gear 7. The protective gear 7 is required to be breathable, dirt-resistant and lightweight, and is convenient for the patient to wear for a long time. In addition, the protective gear 7 is required to be elastic and flexible, and is convenient to wear. The surface of the protective gear 7 is to be bonded with the hook-and-loop fastener, so as to facilitate fixing the finger motion aids of the five fingers. The material of the protective gear 7 may be composite waterproof stretch flannelette, and other materials that accord with the property of the protective gear may be used.


When in use, the protective gear 7 is first worn on the palm and the wrist, then the controller 6 is fixed at the back of the hand of the protective gear 7, and then the five finger motion aids are respectively worn and bonded; and the five finger motion aids are connected to the controller through electric wires, and a power supply of the controller is turned on, so that finger motions can be performed synchronously with the professional rehabilitation person to assist rehabilitation of the patient.


The patient may wear a finger motion aid for a specific finger depending on a paralysis condition of the finger. If a certain finger is not paralyzed or deformed, it may not wear the finger motion aid, but a finger that is not able to be stretched may wear the finger motion aid.


The preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described above, and are merely illustrative and not restrictive to the present invention. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that many changes, modifications and even equivalents may be made within the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims, but would fall within the scope of protection of the present invention.

Claims
  • 1. A rehabilitation hand device comprising: a thumb motion aid, an index finger motion aid, a middle finger motion aid, a ring finger motion aid and a little finger motion aid, wherein each of the thumb motion aid, the index finger motion aid, the middle finger motion aid, the ring finger motion aid and the little finger motion aid comprise a finger motion aid;the finger motion aid comprising: a rubber member;a plastic cover;a finger sleeve, wherein the finger sleeve is provided at a front end of the rubber member, the finger sleeve has an open end, a finger is configured to extend through the open end, and the finger motion aid is configured to be worn on the finger by the finger sleeve; an elongated space, wherein the elongated space is formed by a first bridge, a last bridge, a plurality of intermediate bridges and a plurality of grooves, the elongated space is provided on a front face of the rubber member and a chip is placed in the elongated space; a width of the elongated space is greater than a width of the chip;a back side of the rubber member has a curve radian, wherein the back side of the rubber member is configured to correspond to a curvature of the finger;the plastic cover is disposed on the rubber member and fixedly connected to the rubber member, anda hook-and-loop fastener, wherein the hook-and-loop is disposed underneath the rubber member and fixedly connected to the rubber member,the rehabilitation hand device further comprising a controller and a protective gear, wherein the controller is disposed on the protective gear and fixedly connected to the protective gear;the controller is electrically connected to the chip on the thumb motion aid, the chip on the index finger motion aid, the chip on the middle finger motion aid, the chip on the ring finger motion aid and the chip on the little finger motion aid, respectively; an active assistance signal is received by the controller and the active assistance signal synchronously transmitted to the chip on the thumb, the chip on index finger, middle finger, the chip on ring finger and the chip on little finger motion aids, so that the chip on the thumb, the chip on index finger, the chip on middle finger, the chip on ring finger and the chip on little finger motion aids are forced to synchronously perform a motion action;the hook-and-loop fastener on the thumb motion aid, the hook-and-loop fastener on the index finger motion aid, the hook-and-loop fastener on the middle finger motion aid, the hook-and-loop fastener on the ring finger motion aid and the hook-and-loop fastener on the little finger motion aid are respectively bonded to the protective gear; andthe protective gear is configured to be fixed on a wrist and a palm.
  • 2. The rehabilitation hand according to claim 1, wherein the protective gear is embedded with a hard sheet at one end to facilitate wearing the protective gear on the wrist and the palm.
  • 3. The rehabilitation hand according to claim 1, wherein a length of each of the first bridge and the last bridge is greater than a length of each of the plurality of intermediate bridges to prevent the chip from exiting from the first bridge and the last bridge.
  • 4. The rehabilitation hand according to claim 1, wherein the finger sleeve has a segment of a flat surface at a position, wherein the finger sleeve is in contact with a finger pad for supporting the finger.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
201710552260.3 Jul 2017 CN national
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/CN2018/094198 7/3/2018 WO 00
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO2019/007313 1/10/2019 WO A
US Referenced Citations (23)
Number Name Date Kind
3581740 Sherbourne Jun 1971 A
3756222 Ketchum Sep 1973 A
3937215 Barthlome Feb 1976 A
4671258 Barthlome Jun 1987 A
5103807 Makaran Apr 1992 A
5178137 Goor Jan 1993 A
5261393 Weinzweig Nov 1993 A
5697892 Torgerson Dec 1997 A
6010468 Grove Jan 2000 A
10646356 Deshpande May 2020 B2
20030162634 Farrell et al. Aug 2003 A1
20110118635 Yamamoto May 2011 A1
20120059290 Yip Mar 2012 A1
20120059291 Nguyen Mar 2012 A1
20130226350 Bergelin Aug 2013 A1
20150374575 Kamper Dec 2015 A1
20160252110 Galloway Sep 2016 A1
20160327435 Tseng Nov 2016 A1
20180296419 Tong Oct 2018 A1
20180297214 Lessing Oct 2018 A1
20180303698 Wijesundara Oct 2018 A1
20180335842 Rubin Nov 2018 A1
20190056248 Shepherd Feb 2019 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (16)
Number Date Country
2794193 Sep 2011 CA
101433491 May 2009 CN
101511310 Aug 2009 CN
101940522 Jan 2011 CN
102711933 Oct 2012 CN
104586608 May 2015 CN
204910720 Dec 2015 CN
205181730 Apr 2016 CN
205698416 Nov 2016 CN
205758934 Dec 2016 CN
106625733 May 2017 CN
107157713 Sep 2017 CN
2006063347 Jun 2006 WO
WO-2015095459 Jun 2015 WO
2015134336 Sep 2015 WO
WO-2016088071 Jun 2016 WO
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20200281797 A1 Sep 2020 US