The present invention relates to a medical device for assisting patients in walking who have sustained injury to the lower portion of their legs or feet. More specifically the invention relates to a crutch-like device, which supports the patient's knee and which is controlled by the patient's hand and arm.
It is often the case that people who have injuries to one of the legs at a point below the knee require assistance walking. To meet this need knee crutches and knee canes have been devised that support the healthy knee above the injury site. These devices include, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,141,375 and U.S. Pat. No. 2,778,370 which exemplify these devices. These patents disclose devices that are constructed to support a portion of the patient's weight at a handgrip in the case of a cane, or a handgrip in combination with an armpit support in the case of a crutch. A problem exists with these devices, however, because they limit movement of the lower leg while it is suspended. The devices are also limiting because they require the user to lean to one side over the injured leg and in vertical alignment with the ground-engaging portion of the device because force is being applied above the knee support. This creates an awkward stance that does not mimic a normal walking posture. Also, these devices are often composed of many separate parts that in many cases are secured to the user's leg, which makes them time consuming to put on and take off. Furthermore, many knee-supporting walking aids cannot be used with a lower leg cast or a foot-disabling boot.
Therefore, a need exists in the art for a knee-supporting device that can be used by patients with foot and ankle injuries and does not display the above-described deficiencies.
In order to meet the need described above, the applicant has invented a knee-supporting walking aid, which departs from the conventional thinking that the device must also support a portion of the user's weight applied by parts of the body above the knee. The applicant has discovered that all of the user's weight may be applied at the knee so that the upper portions of the walking aid can be improved for better control of the device without regard to supporting a portion of the user's weight.
The applicant has also discovered that the greatest need for directional control of a knee-supporting aid is in the forward/backward direction and that force applied by the user in this direction is anatomically maximized when the arm of the grasping hand is at a 90-degree angle measured at the elbow. This discovery has led the applicant to devise the present device in which an upwardly-extending handrail of the device projects forwardly at an angle of approximately 25 degrees from the axis of the ground-engaging portion below the knee. This forward tilt of the handrail positions the hand and arm of the user at the desired 90-degree elbow bend while allowing a lifting force to be applied between walking steps to maintain the placement of the knee in a holster of the device.
More specifically, the applicant has devised a knee-supporting walking aid for patients with leg injuries below the knee that comprises an elongate ground-engaging stanchion having an upwardly-extending vertical axis when the user is standing, said stanchion having a top and a front. A knee holster is affixed to the top of the stanchion for receiving the user's knee. An upwardly and frontally-projecting handrail extends from the top of the holster at an angle of between 15 and 35 degrees from said vertical axis with a preferred angle of 25 degrees. The handrail has a hand-gripping portion arranged so that the user's elbow forms an angle of approximately 90 degrees between the upper arm and the forearm when the user stands. The holster is affixed to the top of the stanchion and includes a knee cradle having a bottom-most bend and two upwardly extending lateral arms. The end of each cradle arm has a socket for selectively affixing the bottom end of the handrail to the cradle, whereby the handrail may be relocated from one side of the cradle to the other. Opposite ends of a belt are attached to the cradle at the front.
The handrail has a bend located between two substantially-straight upper and lower portions of the handrail, which projects the upper portion frontally. In an alternate embodiment, angular adjustment of the handrail's frontal projection may be provided at a joint between separate upper and lower portions of the handrail. Angular adjustment is provided by an apertured yoke, which is affixed to the lower portion of the handrail. The upper portion of the handrail is attached to the yoke by fasteners passing through aligned apertures of the yoke and the handrail. Further adjustability is provided by the cradle arm sockets, which include holes at different radial and axial positions that can receive fasteners that affix the lower portion of the handrail in different angular and axial positions. Yet a third means of adjustment is provided by a moveable handgrip located at the top end of the handrail, which can be affixed at alternate axial locations.
It will be appreciated by those of skill in the art that by these mechanical relations further described and shown in the following drawings that a walking aid has been devised that provides ease of use and superior maneuverability as well as other advantages that will be appreciated when compared with the prior art. When taken in conjunction with the following drawings, this description forms a part of the specification wherein like references and characters designate corresponding parts in several views.
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By these descriptions of the various embodiments, it will be appreciated that the present invention provides many advantages to the user. The greater control provided by the frontally projecting handrail makes it easier for the user to walk up stairs and move around in tight spaces. The ease of moving the knee into and out of the holster makes it easier to sit down and stand up and easier to get into and out of a car. Because there is no obstruction to the leg below the knee, it can be used by a patient who wears a therapeutic boot or cast. The invention has a simple construction without many pieces or moving parts. Furthermore, there are many means for adjusting the elements of the device to suit the varying needs of different users.
Other advantages of the invention will be apparent to those of skill in the art. The embodiments shown herein are for illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the applicant's invention, which is to be determined only by the following claims and their legal equivalents.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160120730 A1 | May 2016 | US |