The invention relates to a liner for application to an amputation stump as a cushion, having a proximal entry opening, a wall having a sleeve section provided for the circumferentially enclosing amputation stump, and a distal closed end section, wherein an inside of the wall of the liner is designed for contact on the amputation stump.
Such liners are known in numerous embodiments. They typically consist of an elastic plastic material, such as polyurethane or silicone, and are formed having a wall thickness such that a cushioning effect occurs. Due to the elasticity thereof, the liners are to abut the amputation stump closely and in this way are to form a cushioning intermediate layer between the liner and a prosthesis socket, on which a prosthesis for an amputated limb is fastened. The system made up of prosthesis socket and liner is thus used for fastening a prosthesis on the amputation stump. This fastening can be assisted in a known technology in that a negative pressure is generated between liner and amputation stump and/or between liner and prosthetic socket, by which negative pressure the respective friction combination is reinforced.
An amputation stump occurs upon an amputation of an external limb and has at least one central bone, surrounding soft tissue, and an outer skin region. The closed skin layer present in the healthy body is interrupted by the amputation operation and initially forms—possibly together with the soft tissue—a wound surface and later forms a scar tissue. Even when the original amputation wound is healed, wound surfaces sometimes are formed on the amputation stump as the prosthesis is worn, which wound surfaces can arise due to pressure and abrasion points on the skin of the amputation stump for various reasons. In order that wearing a prosthesis, which significantly enhances the quality of life, is not prevented by a wound on the amputation stump, a wound of an amputation stump has to be cared for and caused to heal as quickly as possible. This is carried out by a treatment of the wounds using wound dressings and disinfecting and healing-promoting active ingredients, which are preferably applied in rest times after the prosthesis is removed.
It is fundamentally known that a wound treatment for the accelerated healing of a wound can also be carried out with the aid of a dielectric barrier plasma, which represents a so-called “cold plasma”. The ionization processes initiated by a high-frequency high-voltage alternating field cause reactive species to arise in the air, which have a germicidal effect and promote the microcirculation of the skin in the treated region. Therefore, planar wound dressings having a planar electrode arrangement are known for wound care, using which a dielectric barrier plasma can be generated on a skin surface for the purpose of wound healing. Adapting the contact area to the size of the wound is already known, so that a wound on an amputation stump could also be cared for in this way. The removal of the prosthesis is a requirement here. In particular for active prosthesis wearers, who do not wish to dispense with the prosthesis over long periods during the day, only a limited time possibility remains for the wound treatment.
The invention is based on the object of enabling simplified handling of the wound care on the amputation stump of a prosthesis wearer.
To achieve this object, according to the invention, a liner of the type mentioned at the outset is characterized in that an electrode arrangement including at least one electrode for a dielectric barrier plasma discharge is integrated into the liner, which arrangement extends starting from the distal end section into the sleeve section, is connected at the distal end section to at least one terminal for a high-voltage control signal, and is provided with a dielectric cover for contact on the amputation stump, and in that the dielectric cover is provided at least in the region of the electrode arrangement on the inside with protrusions, which define at least one gas space upon contact on the amputation stump, in which the dielectric barrier plasma discharge can form.
An electrode arrangement for the formation of a dielectric barrier plasma in the distal end region of the amputation stump is thus integrated in the liner according to the invention so that a wound treatment is possible by means of the dielectric barrier plasma discharge with attached prosthesis. In this way, not only is the possibility improved of performing a wound treatment frequently, if necessary, but the possibility is also opened up of performing a preventative treatment of the skin of the amputation stump, for example, by the displacement of the microcirculation in the affected tissue, to contain the formation of larger wound areas already as they occur. The electrode arrangement is located according to the invention where the most sensitive points are present on the amputation stump, namely at the distal end, thus where the severing of the amputated limb has taken place, and extending terminating thereon proximally into the sleeve section of the liner. It will generally be sufficient here if the electrode arrangement extends only over a part of the length of the sleeve section, even if a point susceptible to skin irritations is still located at the proximal edge of the prosthesis socket, which comes to rest in the region of the proximal end of the liner. In one embodiment of the liner, the electrodes can therefore also extend close to the proximal edge of the liner.
In one preferred embodiment of the liner, the dielectric cover of the electrode arrangement is formed by the wall of the liner itself. This is possible if the wall of the liner itself has sufficient dielectric properties, as can be the case, for example, with a silicone liner, or also with a liner made of a polyurethane gel. A typical production process for such a liner provides a casting procedure. The integration of the electrode arrangement into the wall of the liner can therefore take place during this casting procedure for producing the wall of the liner, by introducing the electrode arrangement in a suitable manner into the wall of the liner. It can be expedient for precise positioning of the electrode arrangement to design the casting procedure in two steps thus, for example, first to cast an outer layer of the wall of the liner, wherein the electrode arrangement can be applied on the inside to the cast first layer. A further layer having defined thickness is then produced by casting to complete the wall. In this way, the electrode arrangement is positioned in a defined manner, so that a sufficiently thick dielectric layer can be ensured between the electrode arrangement and the skin of the amputation stump, which reliably prevents a flashover of the high voltage to the amputation stump, which is painful and destroys tissue.
In one embodiment of the invention, the electrode arrangement extends starting from the distal terminal with finger-like electrode sections into the sleeve section of the liner, so that electrode sections are arranged respectively dielectrically separated from one another in the circumferential direction, at preferably equal intervals to one another.
The electrode arrangement can include two distal terminals, which are each connected to at least one electrode, wherein the electrodes are electrically insulated from one another. It is possible here, for example, to supply AC high voltages equal in amplitude and frequency to the two electrodes, which are shifted in relation to one another by half a period, so that the voltages completely compensate one another upon a superposition. The two electrodes can also have electrode sections extending like fingers here and can extend, for example, approximately over half a circumference of the liner.
It is reasonable for manufacturing if the protrusions on the inside of the wall are ribs aligned in the longitudinal direction. In this embodiment, a core of the casting mold defining the inner wall can be pulled without problems out of an outer mold when the material of the wall has cooled and cured from the liquid starting material to form the elastic wall material.
It can be expedient to produce a distal end region of the liner together with the electrode arrangement and the protrusions as a separate part and to connect it by way of a separately produced part, which represents a significant length of the sleeve section and the entry opening, to the distal part by welding, adhesive bonding, or the like. In this way, it is possible to produce a distal end part of the liner, which is complex to produce, and to connect it to different parts which determine the length of the sleeve section, in order to thus produce required liners of different lengths with identical distal end pieces using the simple completion parts.
The supply of the high voltage signal to the electrode arrangement can be carried out in one embodiment by means of a plug connection insertable in a locking manner into the liner. Magnets attracting one another can be provided to assist the contacting.
The invention is to be explained in greater detail hereinafter on the basis of exemplary embodiments illustrated in the drawing. In the figures:
The sectional illustration of
The liner 1, which is insofar conventionally constructed, is provided according to the invention at the distal end with an inside 7 of the wall 6 equipped with longitudinal ribs 8. The longitudinal ribs 8 extend in a star shape in the distal end section 4. To be able to arrange the longitudinal ribs 8 close enough to one another, long and short longitudinal ribs 8 are alternately arranged adjacent to one another, so that the long longitudinal ribs 8 extend farther into the distal end section 4 than the adjacent short longitudinal ribs 8, as is illustrated in particular in
The liner 1 abuts the amputation stump at the distal end provided with the longitudinal ribs 8 via the longitudinal ribs 8. The longitudinal grooves 9 located between the longitudinal ribs 8 thus form chambers abutting to the amputation stump, in which air is located. Corresponding chambers 9′ result in the region of the distal end section, where only long longitudinal ribs 8 are still located, in the intermediate space between the longitudinal ribs 8.
As may be seen from
High-frequency AC voltage signals are connectable to the connecting cables 5, which signals are applied to the electrodes 12 as high-frequency high-voltage alternating potentials. In principle, the two electrodes 12 can be supplied in a typical way from an AC voltage source, so that one of the two electrodes 12 functions as a reference or ground electrode and the other electrode is subjected to potentials periodically changing in their polarity. However, it is preferred if the two electrodes 12 are each supplied from an AC voltage source with AC voltage potentials opposite in the frequency and in the amplitude thereof, the average potential of which is a ground potential. In this arrangement, the amputation stump functions as the counter electrode to the two electrodes 12. The air located in the longitudinal grooves 9 and in the chambers 9′ is ionized by the AC voltage field generated by the electrodes 12, so that with suitable activation, a plasma can form, which acts on the surface of the amputation stump and has a healing-promoting or preventative effect there both due to disinfection and also due to the increase of microcirculation in the tissue.
The activation of the electrodes 12 using the high-frequency high-voltage AC signals is known to a person skilled in the art. The AC voltage signals can have a harmonic wave function, but are preferably pulsed signals having alternating polarity in relation to the reference potential, wherein the peak voltage of the pulses can be between two and forty kV and the AC voltage frequency can be between several 100 kHz to several 100 MHz. In special cases, the excitation frequency can even go into the GHz range.
If opposite and equal activation signals are used, in principle the activation signals cancel out completely at equal distance from the two electrodes 12. Such an activation therefore has significant advantages for the electromagnetic compatibility in the far range of the electrodes 12. At close range, the advantage arises that the potential difference between the electrodes 12 is twice as high as with a typical single activation from an AC voltage source having an alternating potential and a reference potential.
It may be seen from
It is essential for the formation of a dielectric barrier plasma in the longitudinal grooves 9 or in chambers 9′ that the electrodes 12 are completely shielded by a dielectric material from the amputation stump in the interior of the liner 1 so that electric arcs cannot form between the electrodes 12 and the amputation stump. The direct current flow has to be reliably prevented by the dielectric material. In the exemplary embodiment shown in
The exemplary embodiment shown in
It is connectable, for example, by adhesive bonding or welding to a distal end part 16, in which the longitudinal ribs 8 and the electrode arrangement 10 are located with the distal end section 4 and the connecting cables 5. The distal end part 16 therefore contains all functions for forming the dielectric barrier plasma, while the proximal sleeve part 15 only determines the total length of the liner 1. Since liners 1 of different lengths are required for different amputations and different body sizes, the distal end part 16 can be manufactured uniformly and can merely be combined with proximal sleeve parts of different lengths to form liners 1 of differing total length.
Another exemplary embodiment of a liner 1 according to the invention is illustrated in
The insert part 18 bears the electrode arrangement 10 on the outside and is terminated toward the inside 7 of the liner 1 by a completely closed dielectric material 20, which is only open on top. The electrode arrangement 10 is constructed in principally the same way as explained in particular on the basis of
Of course, it is conceivable in a further variant to form the liner shell 17 without longitudinal ribs 8 and to provide it on the inside 7 only with a step to form the recess 19, into which the insert part 18 can be inserted. In this case, in contrast to the illustrated embodiment, the insert part 18 would contain the complete longitudinal ribs 8. The use of the insert part 18 can furthermore offer the advantage that the dielectric material 20 used for the insert part 18 is selected as a special material, which can differ from the wall material of the liner shell 17.
It is thus possible to form the wall 6 of the liner shell 17 particularly flexibly, for example, in order to simplify the rolling of the liner 1 onto the amputation stump, while the insert part 18 quasi-functions as a distal end cap, which can be formed having a reduced elasticity, but better dielectric properties.
A further embodiment of a liner 1 according to the invention is shown in
It is schematically indicated in
The opposite and equal high voltages of the two voltage sources HV1 and HV2 are suitable for generating a close plasma field. However, the high-voltage fields compensate one another with greater distance to the electrodes 12, so that at some distance relevant electromagnetic disturbance due to the fields initiating the plasma no longer exists.
Of course, the effect using the two high-voltage sources HV1 and HV2 can be dispensed with. It is readily possible to form the electrode arrangement 10 as a single electrode, for which the amputation stump forms the counter electrode, so that an intensive plasma field treatment using a dielectric barrier plasma is enabled on the skin and possibly wound points of the amputation stump. In this case, the formation of a single channel 21 in the distal end section 4 of the liner 1 is sufficient.
The two high-voltage sources HV1 and HV2 can be formed in the same voltage supply, for example, using two transformers wound in opposite directions, the primary coils of which can be activated using the same control signals. The two transformers can possibly also be formed by secondary windings, which—insulated from one another—are wound on the same primary winding. One possible embodiment is that the two secondary windings are arranged adjacent to one another in the axial direction on one oblong primary winding. Of course, it is also possible to activate two separate transformers having separate primary and secondary windings using the same control signals to form the two high-voltage sources HV1 and HV2.
The embodiment illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2018 132 918.0 | Dec 2018 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/DE2019/101104 | 12/18/2019 | WO | 00 |