The present invention generally relates to a compression garment that, through its unique combination of elements, is adapted to provide gird compressive support for easing pain in a wearer's hip muscles, ligaments, and femoral joint area.
Chronic hip pain is increasingly common among Americans, with more than 1 in 14 having experienced such pain on a regular basis. There are many causes of such hip pain, including muscle and tendon strains, osteoarthritis, tendonitis, surgery, or sports-related injuries. In addition, hip pain may be related to ailments affecting the lower back. For instance, a herniated disc in the lumbar region may be the source of not just lower back pain, but also of stress or pain in the hip region. A similar effect of hip pain may be observed in those suffering from sciatica.
This interrelated experience of pain is at least partially attributable to the anatomical connectivity between the hip and lower back. The hip consists of more than a dozen individual muscles that have been categorized into four groups: the iliopsas group, the adductor group, the lateral rotator group, and the gluteal group. Although these muscles are generally associated with the pelvic region of the body, several muscles extend into the lower lumbar region of the spine. The lumbar region of the spine consists of five vertebrae (numbered L1 through L5), which extend generally from the base of the rib cage to the upper portion of the buttocks. Below the lumbar region is the sacrum, which consists of five fused vertebrae (numbered S1 through S5), that help connect the spine to the hip by forming part of the pelvic girdle. Below the sacrum at the base of the pelvic girdle is the lowest portion of the spine, called the coccyx, which is also colloquially known as the tailbone.
There are a variety of devices available to treat chronic hip pain, but they have proven incapable of relieving such mid-body pain and joint stress in many users. For instance, compression shorts with varying designs and made of various materials are widely available. However, these shorts may be ineffective at treating hip pain and associated lower back pain in users for several reasons. First, they are not adjustable; while often composed of elasticized fabric, these shorts are not able to be tightened or loosened so as to provide variable compressive tensioning. Second, prior art compression shorts are not generally designed to provide compressively linked support between the hips and the lower back region, which means that they generally are incapable of treating ailments that, for instance, were caused by a interrelated trauma or minor damage to the hips and lower lumbar region. Moreover, those shorts are inconvenient for many users, because they generally do not permit undergarments to be comfortably worn at the same time as the shorts.
In addition, there are a number of commercially available compression wraps for providing targeting treatment to a specific muscle group or joint. While these wraps provide adjustability that is generally lacking in compression shorts, they do not provide the sort of continuous, simultaneous, girded support to the entire hip region, and thus may not properly maintain the alignment that can be so useful for recovering from surgery, promoting recovery from sport-related injuries, promoting healing and preventing injury recurrence, and for relieving chronic pain. Many individuals suffering from hip pain with interrelated stress on the lower lumbar regions would be likely to benefit from a garment that provides girded alignment and support to these two regions of the body.
In addition, a gird compression garment adapted to help alleviate pain in the wearer's upper body, including the cervical and thoracic regions of a wearer's body, has been disclosed by the inventor in co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/370,619, entitled Gird Compression Garment with Cervical Collar, which is incorporated herein by reference. However, that garment is specifically constructed and adapted to treat portions of the wearer's body other than the hip region, and could not be used alone to treat hip pain in a wearer.
Thus, there is no existing compression garment that provides combinatorial and continuous girded compressive support that encircles the wearer's acetabulofemoral and lower torso regions, to aid in recovery from surgery or a non-surgical injury or condition in the hips, and to relieve joint and muscle pain in those regions of a wearer's body. Accordingly, there is a need for a resiliently flexible compression garment adapted to provide girded support and treatment for the hip regions of the body.
The present invention comprises a resiliently flexible compression garment adapted to encircle the acetabulofemoral, gluteal, and upper pelvic regions of the wearer's lower torso, that further comprises a vertically oriented ligature panel and a fastening placket. The compression garment of the present invention is adapted so that its uppermost rear portion can be preferably placed at approximately the base of the lumbar portion of the spine. The present invention is further directed to a gird compression garment made of bi-directional stretchable fabric that is adapted to encircle a portion of a wearer's body that includes the hip area. The bi-directionality of this material is advantageous because it allows for it to be oriented so as to provide effective, girded support that holds the wearer's acetabulofemoral and gluteal regions in compressive alignment.
Preferably, the present invention comprises a plurality of resiliently flexible panels adapted to conform to the body of a wearer and encircling the gluteal and acetabulofemoral regions; a resiliently flexible vertically oriented ligature panel; and a fastening placket adapted to adjust the compressive force exerted by the garment on the wearer. More preferably, each set of resiliently flexible panels is further coupled to a resiliently flexible anchoring garter, which is adapted to hold the entire garment in place and prevent unwanted movement. The resiliently flexible anchoring garters are preferably adapted to encircle approximately the midpoint of the wearer's quadriceps, or more preferably at a point approximately seven inches below the greater trochanter of a wearer.
The object of the present invention is to provide relief from certain chronic mid-body pain that is not fully treatable using prior art compression garments or other known treatment devices. By providing resiliently flexible, girded compression that is not limited to isolated portions of the mid-body region, but rather that extends throughout the gluteal and acetabulofemoral regions, the embodiments of the present invention are adapted to provide remedial support for treatment of hip injuries and alleviation of pain in certain users. Furthermore, the embodiments of the present invention are adapted to provide for better posture and joint coordination (particularly by promoting better right-to-left hip alignment), more stable movements, and more complete muscle relaxation for performance of daily activities, in addition to being adapted to protect against recurrence of injury related to more strenuous activities, including sports and other athletic endeavors. This is accomplished in part through the simulation of and encircling support for the iliopsas muscle.
The embodiments of the present invention are believed to be useful for the treatment of a variety of ailments, including dislocated hip joints, torn cartilage, torn or strained muscles, torn or strained ligaments, joint tendinitis, joint arthritis, or herniated discs in the lower back, and in the prevention of injury recurrence (such as in wearers with healed pelvic fractures). Furthermore, the embodiments of the present invention may be used to reduce and/or minimize pain in the acetabulofemoral joint, the lower lumbar vertebrae, the sacral vertebrae, and the coccyx, in part by promoting proper hip posture that synchronizes with the lower lumbar region. In addition, the embodiments of the present invention may be particularly effective for treatment during the remodeling phase of muscle or joint recovery, i.e., after the injury phase, the acute/inflammatory phase, and the repair/regeneration phase have been completed. In this way, the embodiments of the present invention may aid in the rehabilitation of injuries and promote comfort for a wearer. In addition, this garment may be useful for active users without injuries in order to decrease the chances of injuring or over-stretching muscles and ligaments during daily physical activities.
The garment 10 of
In a preferred embodiment, the fastening placket 21 is sewn into the garment 10, such that the lining or backing of the fastening placket 21 is exposed on the front portion of the garment 10. More preferably, the fastening placket 21 is sewn into the right-side front panel 31, such that the backing or liner of the fastening placket 21 is covered by the same resiliently flexible material as the panels 31 and 32.
The garment 10, including the front panels 31 and 32, is preferably made from a resiliently flexible material that is bi-directionally stretchable. More preferably, the plurality of panels of the garment 10 are made from the same resiliently flexible, bi-directionally stretchable material. More preferably, the resiliently flexible material is more stretchable in a first direction than it is in a second, perpendicular direction. For instance, bi-directionally stretchable resiliently flexible materials that are well-suited to the present invention include spandex, polyester, or elastane that is approximately four times as stretchable in a first direction than it is a second, perpendicular direction.
Preferably, the bi-directionally stretchable resiliently flexible material of front panels 31 and 32 is oriented so that the more stretchable axis of the material is diagonal with respect to the median or sagittal plane of the wearer's body. This orientation is illustrated in
Preferably, the rear panels 33, 34 are made from the same bi-directionally stretchable material as front panels 31, 32. Preferably, the bi-directionally stretchable resiliently flexible material of rear panels 33 and 34 is oriented so that the more stretchable axis of the material is oriented parallel to the transverse or axial plane of the wearer's body. This orientation is illustrated in
The garment 10 of
Preferably, as illustrated in
The garment 10 of
Although the preferred embodiment of the invention has been described in detail for purposes of illustration, various modifications may be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20190015283 A1 | Jan 2019 | US |