The present application relates to an article for and method for protecting a hand, especially the bones of a hand.
A punch from a human hand can deliver energy to a target of from about 40 to 400 Joules. With optimal speed and technique, such energy transfer to a target can be devastating to the target as well as the hand that delivers it. The present description may related to such hand protection, e.g., protecting the bones of the of the punching hand, e.g., metacarpals and/or phalanges, while delivering energy to the target.
The description includes a method of protecting metacarpals II, III, IV, and V of a human hand in need of protection, the method comprising mounting an article to the hand, the article comprising a conformable elastic wrap comprising a top face, a bottom face, a first edge, a second edge, a first end, and a second end which exerts a compressive force against the hand when extended, biased, or stretched; and a sleeve comprising an inner surface and an outer surface configured to slidably engage the top and bottom faces; the method further comprising mounting the first end to metacarpal I such that the bottom face engages the palm of the human hand, wrapping the conformable elastic wrap such that the bottom face is urged toward and around metacarpal V and between metacarpals I and II such that the elastic wrap defines a first compressive bandage or loop about the hand; urging the bottom face from between metacarpals I and II toward and around proximal phalange V; positioning the sleeve such that the outer surface overlies proximal phalanges II-V; and extending the wrap such that the sleeve is held in place by a compressive force.
The anatomical terms used in the description are generally understood terms, in reference to
With reference to
In an embodiment, the method may comprise adding one or more loops of compressive elastic wrap about hand 1000 before and/or after the positioning of sleeve 100.
The term conformable means a material's ability to closely conform to and overlie a body portion or to some other item which needs to be wrapped in an absorbent material.
The term “elastic’ is used herein to mean any material which, upon application of a biasing force, is stretchable to a stretched, biased length which is at least about 125 percent that is, at least about one-and-one-quarter, of its relaxed, unbiased length, and which will recover at least about 40 percent of its stretch or elongation upon release of the stretching, elongating force. A hypothetical example which would satisfy this definition of an elastic or elastomeric material would be a one (1) inch sample of a material which is elongatable to at least 1.25 inches and which, upon being elongated to 1.25 inches and released, will return to a length of not more than 1.15 inches. Many elastic materials may be stretched by much more than 25 percent of their relaxed length, for example 100 percent, or more, and many of these will return to substantially their original relaxed length, for example, to within 105 percent of their original relaxed length upon release of the stretching, elongating force.
The term “breathable” refers to a material which is permeable to water vapor having a minimum WVTR (water vapor transmission rate) of about 300 g/m2/24 hours. The WVTR of a fabric may indicate how comfortable a fabric would be to wear. WVTR is measured as indicated below and the results are reported in grams/Square meter/day. However, often applications of breathable barriers desirably have higher WVTRs and breathable material or fabric of the present invention can have WVTRs exceeding about 800 g/m2/24 hours, 1500 g/m2/24 hours, or even exceeding 3000 g/m2/24 hours, An WVTR may be measured by a standardized characterization measurement known to a person of ordinary skill in the art, e.g., an ASTM standard, e.g., ASTM E96.
By the term resilient substrate is meant a substrate as measured for durometer hardness according to ASTM D2240, e.g., ASTM D2240-02b, and having a durometer hardness of from e.g., 30-100 on the Shore 00 scale, as disclosed in
In an embodiment, sleeve 100 may comprise two or more portions 201 and 202. Portion 200 may comprise an elastic substrate, bonded to resilient substrate 201 along edges 204, 206, thus forming a tubular void through which conformable elastic wrap 300 may be threaded to form article 400.
In an embodiment, with reference to
The resilient laminate may be an isomeric laminate, a quasi isomeric laminate, or of other construction as known to the person of skill in the art.
The edge profile of the resilient substrate may be chosen by the person of ordinary skill to provide the most effective TOP face and minimize pressure points or pressure regions overlying any hand bones. Such edge profiles include square, chamfered, double-chamfered, rounded, shark nose, and/or stingray, as known to a person of ordinary skill in the art.
In an embodiment, the method of protecting metacarpals 1004, 1006, 1008, 1010 may protect proximal phalanges 1012, 1014, 1016, 1018. Such protection may occur while participating in combat or in sports comprising self-defense and/or hand-to-hand combat, e.g., aikido, boxing, jeet kune do, jiu-jitsu, judo, krav maga, mixed martial arts, muay thai, and/or sambo.
This is an International Application under the Patent Cooperation Treaty, claiming priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/304,766, filed Jan. 31, 2022, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2023/011711 | 1/11/2023 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63304766 | Jan 2022 | US |