This invention relates to medical devices for obesity prevention and treatment, specifically to a novel nasal device reducing its wearer's appetite for overeating.
Obesity becomes a worldwide epidemic in our modern time, especially in developed countries; there is a strong association between development of obesity in adulthood and development of other serious diseases, including diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease. Therefore, desires for finding a simple, effective approach to its prevention and cure without the use of medication, thus without any side effects, are strong. Although many different diet methods using either food substitutes or willpower are created, none of them is actually effective in a long-term.
It is well known that our ‘taste’ of flavors actually strongly relies on our sense of smell. Anosmics, people who have lost their sense of smell due to illness or injury, often lose their appetite for food. Thus, a simple but impractical method to significantly reduce or even eliminate flavor perception temporarily is pinching the nose while chewing food because no air, thus no significant amount of food odors, flows from the mouth through the nasopharynx into the nasal cavity where olfactory receptors reside. So far, however, no medical devices have been developed to exploit such well-known phenomena in a practical way. In contrast, nasal filters have been developed over one century as filtering devices that users can either insert in the nostrils or cover the nose with.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,138,107 to Adams et al. discloses the use of medication—calcium channel blockers—to intentionally inhibit olfactory sensory perception to treat some health problems related to eating, including obesity. Given the olfactory bulbs' position inside the nasal cavity, any therapy based on the method would hardly be practical to individuals. In cases of rotten food or a fire emergency, such a therapy itself would be potentially harmful or dangerous since it intends to inhibit the sense of smell completely for a long time. Furthermore, such a therapy would result in involuntary abstinence, a serious side effect, because sex and smell may be linked in our brain by similar pathways (about a quarter of anosmics lose not only their appetite for food but also their interest in sex). Therefore, a safer, simpler, and more practical or effective approach is still needed.
Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to provide a simple device that assists the user to prevent or treat obesity. Another object of the invention is to provide a safe diet therapy that enables the dieter to use own biological system naturally and therefore has no perceivable side effects. Another object is to provide a long-term effective therapy for obesity prevention and treatment. Yet another object of the invention is to provide a therapy which effect on dieters can be on or off instantly as desired. Further objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent after consideration of the following detailed descriptions and drawings.
This invention discloses a novel nasal device as a safe, simple, and convenient tool that helps the wearer diet. In accordance with several modes, the device basically comprises a check valve and a cylindrical or conical airtight tube with an opening at each end; the valve is so fastened or connected to the tube as to form a one-way channel or passage for air. The valve, preferably made of a polymer material such as polyethylene (PE) or polyvinyl chloride (PVC), allows airflow to pass through the tube from one end, but it stops airflow from the other. The tube can be made in a variety of ways or designs to conform to or fit the interiors of different nostrils air-tightly and comfortably. The device may be inserted into each nostril individually or in a pair, which two devices are connected with a flexible strip or band. The effects of the device can be turned on or off instantly as it is worn or removed. Before eating or after eating for certain time or amount, the user puts on the device to the nose. Then the wearer can breathe in through the nose but has to breathe out through the mouth. Because airflow is prevented from carrying chewed food odors to the olfactory receptors in the nasal cavity, the wearer loses flavor perception and, therefore, the appetite for food. Furthermore, the device does not allow the wearer to eat too fast, further reducing the chance of overeating. Meanwhile, the wearer retains the sense of smell for the environment. The device can be easily removed immediately after eating or whenever desired.
A mode of the present invention, a device 10, is illustrated in
Another mode of the present invention, a device 11, is illustrated in
Another mode of the present invention, a device 12, is illustrated in
Another mode of the present invention, a device 13, is illustrated in
Another mode of the present invention, a device 14, is illustrated in
Another mode of the present invention, a device 16, is illustrated in
The usage or operation of devices 10-16 is generally described as follows. Before eating or after eating for certain time or amount, the user inserts such a device into the nostril, with the valve end first, and pushes the other end into the nostril with a fingertip until the device resides inside the nostril. The device conforms to the nostril and thereby seals the nostril air-tightly. It can fit different types of noses, such as the Caucasian, Oriental, or Negroid one, or different sizes through the deformation or conformation of ring 34, tube 32′, layer 38, flange 40, or tube 34′. Thus, airflow can only enter into the nose through the device. Furthermore, their elasticity or resilience helps to retain the device in place and prevent inadvertent removal of the device from the nostril. Such conformation does not prevent check valve 20 or 20′ from function properly because of either the flexibility of valves 20, 20′ or the rigidity of ring 32, tube 33, or tube 52. The major function of flexible flange 40′ of device 16 is to further prevent air from leaking between the exterior of tube 34′ and the interior walls of the nostril. During eating, the wearer can breathe in through the nose but has to breathe out through the mouth. Therefore, similar to pinching the nose while chewing, no air carrying significant amount of chewed food odors flows from the mouth through the nasopharynx into the nasal cavity where olfactory receptors reside. As a result, the wearer loses significantly or completely the flavor perception and, therefore, the appetite for food. Furthermore, because of the time needed for the exhalation through the mouth, the wearer cannot eat too fast, further avoiding unconsciously overeating. However, wearing the device does not disturb wearer's sense of smell through the nose for sensing potential unhealthy or even dangerous environment or situation. To stop the effects of the devices, the wearer can remove them by blowing while closing the mouth or by pulling.
A pair of devices 10-16 can be connected with a flexible strip 42 at the open-ends of the tubes, as shown for a pair of devices 12 in
A number of advantages of the present invention, from the description above, are evident: it is safe, simple, discreet, easy to use, cheap to make, and useable whenever desired. Its use results in no perceivable side effects. The device just enables the wearer to use own biological system naturally. It is also effective by helping the wearer to control the food intake and never to overeat for the lifetime. Its effect is on or off instantly whenever it is worn or removed as desired.
While the above description contains many specificities, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of the invention, but as exemplifications of the presently preferred modes thereof. Many other ramifications and variations are possible within the teachings of the inventions.
For example, in general, the approach is also applicable to other mammals, such as pets. There are also two extreme cases, not included in the descriptions above: 1) a nasal plug that completely blocks the nostril; and 2) a nasal filter that reduces, not completely but significantly, airflow from mouth to nose. Forcing both the inhalation and the exhalation through the mouth, the former can also reduce the appetites although the method is unhealthy. The latter, such as nasal filters with very fine filtering capability, may significantly weaken the exhalation airflow through the nose and therefore reduce wearers' appetites in certain degree.
Furthermore, the device may alternatively or additionally comprise the following: 1) a check valve with a different design or mechanism from the modes described; 2) a tube with a different conformation structure or mechanism, such as tubes with a plurality of flanges greater than two or with a soft coat on the exterior in multiple pieces or one piece with multiple slits; 3) a tube made in a variety of shapes, sizes, materials, and textures, such as an elliptical tube; 4) a different configuration from what are illustrated in the modes described, such as a valve installed in the middle, instead of the end, of the tube; 5) smoothed or rounded edges of the tubes for comfort or to guide insertion; 6) an adhesive band with a different shape or with complete or partial coverage of adhesive materials; 7) a check valve controlling one opening of an adhesive band for a single nostril; and 8) different combinations of the modes and alternatives described above, such as a one-way passage with a filter or filtering material.
Thus the scope of the invention should be determined not by the modes illustrated, but by the appended claims and their legal equivalents.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB09/51443 | 4/6/2009 | WO | 00 | 12/8/2010 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61061621 | Jun 2008 | US |