1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to pressure ulcer treatment and, more particularly, to a mattress for relieving pressure ulcers and treating shallow open ulcers.
2. Description of the Related Art
A pressure ulcer is typically a localized injury to the skin and/or to the underlying tissue typically resulting from a combination of factors including pressure, shearing forces, friction, and moisture. Although pressure ulcers can normally be prevented and treated if found early, they can be very difficult to prevent in frail, elderly patients, those patients who have suffered severe trauma, and those patients who are confined to a wheelchair due to the lack of mobility/activity and pressure exerted on their skin. The lack of mobility/activity contributes to, if not causes, pressure ulcers because a lack of mobility/activity normally leads to unrelieved pressure on soft tissues overlaying a bony prominence. This unrelieved pressure either reduces or completely obstructs blood flow to the superficial tissue. The most common regions for pressure ulcers include the occiput, shoulder, elbow, sacrum, heel, hip, knee, ankle, ear, as well as the scapula, ischium, and the ball of the foot.
Recent investigations indicate that prolonged pressure exerted on the skin and the lack of mobility/activity leads to compression, tension and shear of the skin and the underlying tissue.
More than one and a half million hospitalized patients develop dermal pressure ulcers each year, which results in a significant increase in hospitalization costs and typically prolongs a patient's stay by 8.2 days.
Thus, a mattress for relieving pressure ulcers solving the aforementioned problems is desired.
An embodiment of a mattress for relieving pressure ulcers includes a first sponge layer, an air mattress layer over the first sponge layer, an intermediate layer over the air mattress layer, a second sponge layer over the intermediate layer, and a paper sheet layer over the second sponge layer. The sponge layer and the air mattress layer are configured to increase the contact area of the patient's body with the bed, according to a patient's weight. The intermediate layer is a rubber layer configured to provide ventilation for areas of the mattress that contact a patient's body using dry air or dry air mixed with ozone gas, essential/volatile oil, and/or antibacterial vapors. The second sponge layer is designed to distribute the air under the patient's body. The paper sheet layer is configured to provide alarms in the event the mattress gets wet due to sweating or incontinence.
These and other features of the present invention will become readily apparent upon further review of the following specification and drawings.
Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
Referring to
The intermediate layer 140 can be connected to a ventilation system 170 having an air treatment unit 300. The intermediate layer 140 can have a plurality of air release units 200. The air release units 200 receive air from the air treatment unit 300 and release air out of the intermediate layer 140 through a plurality of first openings 142 in the plurality of air release units 200. The air treatment unit 300 can be configured to mix air A from the ventilation system 170 with vapors from essential volatile oil and antibacterial liquids 320. The ventilation system 170 also includes a second opening 177, a control panel 175, a third opening 182 and at least one air compressor 185. The ventilation system 170 can include an ozone generator 360 (
Referring to
The mattress 10 can provide an increased contact area CA (
The air mattress layer 120 can be made of polyvinyl chloride (PVC), urethane plastic, or other suitable material that can be inflated. The air mattress layer 120 can be inflated by, for example, an air pump 180 housed in the ventilation system 170. The air pump 180 can be selectively activated. For example, the air pump 180 can be activated when a patient is situated on the mattress 10. The pressure exerted on the mattress 10 by the weight of the patient can cause the second electric conduction sheet 130 of the air mattress layer 120 to contact the first electric conduction sheet 110 of the first sponge layer 100. When the second electric conduction sheet 130 contacts the first electric conduction sheet 110, air can be drawn in through the third opening 182 and pass through a first tube 187 to inflate the air mattress layer 120.
When a patient is lying on the mattress 10 (
Maximizing the contact area CA between the body and the mattress can reduce the impact of pressure ulcers. To achieve the optimal contact area CA between the patient's body B and the mattress 10, calculations on the mass of each body segment were made. The calculation of the body segment mass for the head, chest, right and left foot, right and left forearm, right and left hand, right and left shank, right and left thigh, and right and left right upper arm are illustrated in Table 1.
The relative mass values provided in Table 1 were obtained from Bishop, R. D. and Hay, J. G., Basketball: The Mechanics of Hanging In The Air., Medicine and Science In Sports, 11(3), 274-277 (1979).
The reaction forces exerted by the mattress 10 were calculated using the equation of simple beam reaction with hinged supports. For example, the load L of a patient's trunk T is distributed between the support forces at a patient's shoulders S, a patient's lower back LB, and a patient's buttocks BT (
As shown in Table 2, the reduction on the relative pressure under the body support area was 97%, 84%, 89%, and 38% for the feet, lower back & buttock, shoulders, and head, respectively, between a solid surface contact area CA and an air mattress contact area CA. It is to be noted that the total is less than 100% since the relative mass of the hands, forearms, and a portion of the upper arms was not taken into account. Regardless, this significant reduction was principally due to increasing the contact area CA of the supporting areas by an air mattress. Optimal results are achieved using appropriate air pressure inside the air mattress, which plays an important role in controlling the contact area CA between the patient's body B and the mattress 10. It is to be noted that air mattresses with high air pressure inside can result in less contact area than those with less air pressure. As such, the air pressure should be adjusted for each person based on the patient's body weight or body mass index (BMI).
The intermediate layer 140 can be formed from flexible rubber or a suitable material that can stretch to conform to the patient's body B. The intermediate layer 140 can have any suitable thickness, such as a thickness of 2 cm. Further, the intermediate layer 140 can also include a plurality of vibrators 145, such as gentle vibrators, configured for vibrating and relieving shearing forces by altering the parallel movement of the tissue, as well as refreshing the blood flow to the superficial tissue.
Referring to
Air from the air treatment unit can be pumped to and released by the air release units 200. For example, air A from the ventilation system 170 is released via a second tube 189 into the intermediary layer 140 and through the openings 270, as illustrated in
The air treatment unit 300 can help avoid increased skin temperatures that can be associated with increasing the contact area CA. Referring to
The ozone gas generator 360 can be configured for generating ozone gas for patients suffering from Stage III or Stage IV pressure ulcers. The ozone gas can be mixed with the air A drawn in by the at least one compressor 185 and subsequently pumped into the intermediate layer 140 of the mattress 10 and, thereafter, selectively released, such as by the air release units 200, as previously described.
By way of operation, the air A can be drawn into the ventilation system 170 through opening 177 by at least one compressor 185 and pumped by the at least one compressor 185 through the ventilation system 170 and through the ozone generator 360 along a path denoted by the arrows illustrated in
Referring to
Referring to
The generalized system 400 also includes an on/off switch 420, a transmitter 435, such as for wireless transmission or for wireless communication of information from the at least one controller/processor 430 to a communication device 437. For example, the transmission can also be a wired communication or transmission, relating to the posture of the patient's body B lying on the mattress 10. The communication or the transmission of information from the transmitter 435 to the communication device 437, is respectively indicated by the dotted lines 439. The communication device 437 can be any suitable computing device, such as a standalone computer, computer terminal, portable computing device, networked computer or computer terminal, or networked portable device that can include a microcontroller, an ASIC, or a PLC.
Further, it is to be noted that the memory 440 can be adapted to store data and information, as well as program(s) or instructions for implementing operation of the ventilation system 170 and the air pump 180 of the mattress 10. The memory 440 can be any suitable type of computer readable and programmable memory, such as non-transitory computer readable media, random access memory (RAM) or read only memory (ROM), for example. The generalized system 400 can also be powered by a suitable power source 410.
Calculations, determinations, or data transmission, the sending or receiving of control signals or commands, or providing information in relation to the patient's position, such as the activation of the plurality of the vibrators 145 in the intermediate layer 140 or the activation of the ventilation system 170 are performed or executed by the at least one controller/processor 430. Also, the functions of the at least one controller/processor 430 can also be performed by an integrated single controller/processor in the generalized system 400. Further, information, such as related to the position of a patient's body B, can be displayed on a suitable display associated with the communication device 437.
The at least one controller/processor 437 can be associated with, or incorporated into, any suitable type of computing device, such as a PLC or an ASIC. The components of generalized system 400 including the at least one controller/processor 430, the memory 440, the transmitter 435, the alarm 450, the air pump 180, the at least one air compressor 185, the plurality of vibrators 145, and any associated computer readable media are in communication with one another by any suitable type of data bus, as is well known in the art.
By way of operation, prior to a patient lying on the mattress 10, either the patient or another person, such as a medical practitioner, can activate the ventilation system 170 and, in turn, the air pump 180, by turning the on/off switch 420 to the “on” position. When the load L of the patient's body B causes the second electric conduction sheet 130 to make contact with the first electric conduction sheet 110, the air pump 180 can draw air in through the third opening 182 and inflate the air mattress layer 120 via the first tube 187. The air pump 180 can continue to inflate the air mattress layer 120 until the second electric conduction sheet 130 is no longer in contact with the first electric conduction sheet 110.
Depending on the posture of the patient lying on the mattress 10, the load L of the patient's body parts, such as the head H, shoulders S, lower back LB, buttocks BT, and heals HL, can activate the air release units 200 by applying pressure to the corresponding pressure plates 250. The pressure will cause the spring-cap 240 of each air release unit 200 to compress, and release air A stored in the inner cavity 215 into the second sponge layer 150 through the openings 260 and corresponding first openings 142 in the intermediate layer 140, as illustrated in
The plurality of vibrators 145 can also be activated and programmed to vibrate for specific intervals, such as for 30 seconds, once every fifteen minutes, according to the patient's comfort and condition so as to relieve shearing forces, which typically result from applied forces causing two contiguous internal body parts to deform in a transverse plan (i.e. due to lateral force—normally when skin is in contact with a support surface and the underlying tissue moves parallel to the support and the skin shear forces develop). Further, the sensor matrix 167 can also be activated to detect excessive moisture, such as from bed wetting or sweating, and alert a medical practitioner that the patient's sheets need to be changed so as not to develop or worsen any existing pressure ulcers.
It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to the embodiments described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the following claims.
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“Pressure Reducing Foam Mattress 6500 Lite,” http://www.rehabmart.com/product/pressure-reducing-foam-mattress-6500-lite-32970.html (Last Accessed on Nov. 11, 2014) 3 pages. |
Bishop, R.D. and Hay, J.G., Basketball: The Mechanics of Hanging in the Air., Medicine and Science in Sports, 11(3), 274-277 (1979). Abstract only. |