The invention relates to an orthopedic sleeve for placing on a body, having a flexible basic body with at least one stabilizing element made of plastic arranged thereon, and to a method for producing such a sleeve. The sleeve is designed in particular as a liner as interface between a stump and a prosthesis socket, but it can also be designed as a bandage, which is applied to the body for cushioning and/or support.
Bandages, in particular joint bandages, are applied for supporting or for protecting the muscles and ligaments. For this purpose, the bandage is pulled over or wound around the joint that is to be protected and is then optionally fixed. In contrast to immobilizing orthoses, bandages allow the limbs connected via the joint to move relative to each other to a certain extent, in at least one degree of freedom. For this purpose, the bandages have a basic body made of a flexible material, for example a foam or a textile. To support the stabilization effect, stabilizing elements are arranged on the basic body and have greater strength and stiffness than the basic body, such that, in addition to protection against mechanical influences, increased restriction on movement is obtained.
Moreover, so-called liners are known which are fitted on a stump of a limb in order to produce an interface to a prosthesis. The liners can be designed as plastics liners or silicone liners and can be made airtight or coated with adhesive on the inside. By means of a partial vacuum, the liner holds a prosthesis socket on the stump, which partial vacuum can be applied between the liner and the prosthesis socket. Alternatively, the liner has, on the outside thereof, locking elements via which the prosthesis socket is held on the liner. By virtue of the nature of its inner surface, the liner adheres to the stump.
US 2008/0039757 A1 describes a flexible bandage with a framework having a surface for placing on an area of a body, wherein the framework has a multiplicity of permanent openings. A woven fabric or foam can be applied to the framework, for example by welding, adhesive bonding or sewing.
EP 876 130 B1 describes an orthopedic brace with a retainer made of a one-piece injection-molded component having regions of different thicknesses, in order to adapt to the contour of a selected part of a limb. A layer of elastic material is mounted inside the retainer, in order to cushion the retainer when it engages on the selected part of the limb. The retainer can be connected to the cushioning by adhesive bonding or in some other way.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,024,712 describes an ankle-joint orthosis with an inner textile part extending at least partially around the ankle joint. An outer brace is injection-molded into the textile and supplies additional support for the joint against unintended movements.
CA 2,398,059 A1 describes an orthopedic brace with a flexible inner part and an outer brace which is molded directly onto the flexible inner part.
A problem is that the direct binding of the cushioning material to the stabilizing elements leads to abrupt stresses, which is a disadvantage in terms of durability and wearing comfort.
The object of the present invention is to make available an orthopedic sleeve in which a firm and lasting union is achieved between the basic body and the stabilizing element.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by a sleeve having the features of the main claim, and by a method having the features of the additional independent claim. Advantageous embodiments and refinements of the invention are set forth in the dependent claims, the description and the figures.
The orthopedic sleeve, which is provided for placing on a body and is composed of a flexible basic body with at least one stabilizing element made of plastic arranged thereon, is characterized in that the stabilizing element has regions which have a cross section reduced in relation to the rest of the cross section, and in which the stabilizing element is adhesively bonded to the basic body and/or connected cohesively to the basic body. By providing the connection in the regions having a reduced cross section, it is possible to make available connection regions with sufficient elasticity, such that the risk of the basic body tearing or coming loose from the stabilizing element is reduced. At least a transition is thus made available by a cross-sectional reduction, such that the edge regions of the stabilizing element have, by comparison with the rest of the cross section, an increased flexibility, which reduces the risk of the connection to the basic body being torn out or similar. The sleeve can be part of an orthosis or prosthesis and can additionally be incorporated in a system of orthotic or prosthetic components. The sleeve can likewise exert an independent supporting and protecting function when worn as a bandage.
In a refinement of the invention, provision is made that the stabilizing element is applied to a flexible substrate material. This application can be carried out by injection-molding the stabilizing element onto or from behind the substrate material. The substrate material then forms those regions that are connected cohesively to the basic body and/or adhesively bonded thereto. By the interposition of the substrate material when securing the stabilizing element or the stabilizing elements on the basic body, it is possible to bind the stabilizing elements to the substrate material in a very durable manner and then connect the latter in turn to the basic body, for example by welding, adhesive bonding or the like. With a stabilizing element injection-molded onto the substrate material in this way, a high level of reproducibility of the connection is possible, and the flexible substrate material is also able to allow a mobility, however slight, of the stabilizing element relative to the basic body, as a result of which tears at transitions from the stabilizing element to the substrate material and from the substrate material to the basic body can be avoided. It is also possible to produce articulated connections by injection-molding onto or from behind the substrate material, for example by two stabilizing elements being arranged lying opposite each other such that they form a hinge.
Advantageously, the substrate material protrudes, at least in part, beyond the periphery of the stabilizing element, such that regions are formed that are suitable for adhesively bonding or welding to the basic body. By this protrusion beyond the stabilizing elements, the contact surface is also enlarged, so that stable securing of the stabilizing element to the basic body is ensured.
In a refinement of the invention, provision is made that adhesive bonding or cohesive connection to the basic body is effected only in the region or regions of reduced thickness protruding beyond the periphery of the stabilizing elements, thereby ensuring sufficient elasticity and binding to the basic body.
On the side directed toward the basic body in the assembled state, the substrate material can be laminated with a plastic, so as to provide better connectability to the material of the basic body. The laminated-on plastic and the basic body are advantageously a pairing of materials that can be efficiently welded or adhesively bonded to each other. By means of the plastic that is laminated on, it is possible that the substrate material does not need to be optimized in respect of a connection to the basic body, and instead the connection to the stabilizing element can be optimized, for example, while the plastic that is laminated on produces the connection to the material of the basic body. By application of a plastic, two materials are thus interposed between the stabilizing element and the basic body, such that the different mechanical requirements of the stabilizing element and of the basic body can be more easily met. The plastic that is laminated on is advantageously different than the substrate material and can be polyurethane. It is likewise possible for the plastic that is laminated on to be configured as a dipole material.
The substrate material can be designed as a textile, in particular as a velour, particularly advantageously here a polyamide velour, since the material of the stabilizing element and also that of the laminated-on plastic anchors itself very efficiently in the velour surface and, in this way, a good adherence and connection can be achieved between the stabilizing element and the substrate material, likewise between the laminated plastic and the substrate material.
The stabilizing element can be made of a material that has a lower melting point than the material of the basic body or of the substrate material. It is thereby possible for the stabilizing element to be injection-molded onto the substrate element or onto the basic body without the substrate material or the basic body being deformed by the heat input, or without the material properties of the substrate material or of the basic body changing. The stabilizing element can be made of polyurethane or polyethylene, for example.
In a refinement of the invention, provision is made that several stabilizing elements, connected to each other in an articulated manner, are secured on the basic body. The securing can take place either directly in the thinner regions or via the substrate element. For this purpose, the stabilizing elements are designed such that they establish a form-fit connection to each other, for example by one stabilizing element being designed as an eyelet into which a pin of the second stabilizing element engages. The assembly of the two stabilizing elements to form a joint is advantageously carried out prior to the securing of the substrate material on the basic body, although it can also be carried out subsequently, when the two stabilizing elements are correspondingly positioned and secured on the basic body.
The basic body is advantageously designed as a textile, in particular as an elastic textile, for example as an elastic knit or elastic woven fabric. The textile can be coated on the inner face and/or the outer face in order to adjust properties of the sleeve, for example of the liner or of the bandage, in the desired manner. Thus, the inner face and outer face can have an airtight and/or adhering coating, in order to achieve good contact on the body part or on a stump. Alternatively, the basic body can also be made from foam, for example neoprene. It is also possible for the sleeve to be made wholly or partially of plastic or silicone, particularly in the embodiment of the sleeve as a liner.
To permit good adherence of the stabilizing element, the substrate material is connected to the stabilizing element over the entire surface, and the substrate material can likewise be connected to the basic body over the entire surface, which represents an alternative to securing only at the protruding regions or at the narrowed regions of the stabilizing element.
In one embodiment of the invention, provision is made that the sleeve is designed as a liner, wherein the substrate material has an adhesive, in particular airtight coating. This coating can be applied on the inner face and/or the outer face. The stabilizing element can be designed as a distal cap or part of another supporting device or securing device for securing or receiving a prosthesis socket. The liner can have a closed cross section. Alternatively, the sleeve is designed as a bandage for placing on the body. The bandage can have a closed cross section and can be pulled over a limb. It is likewise possible that the sleeve is designed as a bandage with an open cross section and, after being applied, is closed or is fixed in the desired position.
The method for producing a sleeve as claimed in one of the preceding claims comprises the steps whereby a stabilizing element made of a plastic is injection-molded onto or from behind a flexible substrate material, and the substrate material is then welded and/or adhesively bonded to a flexible basic-body blank. The basic body or the basic body blank can be closed or also open, for example as a closeable lumbar orthosis, or as a closed knee bandage which is fitted by being pulled on over the lower leg. In addition to a design in which the sleeve is open at both ends and in which a substantially tubular basic body is present, it is also possible to provide a sleeve which is open at one end and which, for example, extends over a stump and can be arranged between the limb and a prosthetic device.
Several stabilizing elements can be injection-molded onto a substrate material and then separated from the substrate material so as to form at least one region protruding beyond the periphery of the stabilizing element. It is thereby possible to produce the stabilizing elements separately in an automated manner and, when necessary, to cut the stabilizing elements out from a basic material and then connect them to the basic body.
The side of the substrate material directed away from the stabilizing element can be laminated with a plastic, in particular polyurethane, prior to the welding or adhesive bonding, in order to be able to achieve a better connection between the substrate material and the basic body. The plastic that is laminated on advantageously has thermoplastic properties, so as to provide a sufficient elasticity even after a thermal connection.
The substrate material can be connected to the basic-body blank by means of high-frequency welding, as a result of which it is possible to achieve increased variability of the weld width by suitable guiding of the electrode. A narrow or wide connection of the substrate material to the basic body can then be achieved depending on the charge.
The substrate material can be connected to the basic-body blank only in a region protruding beyond the stabilizing element, such that an increased elasticity is achieved and a direct connection of the stabilizing element to the basic body is avoided.
Illustrative embodiments of the invention are explained in more detail below with reference to the attached figures, in which:
As an alternative to a design of the substrate material 30 as a film, it can also be designed as a textile on which the stabilizing element 20 is secured. The stabilizing element can be secured on a textile substrate material 30 likewise by welding or adhesive bonding, or by being injection-molded onto or from behind the substrate material.
As an alternative to a subsequent application of the substrate material 30 to the stabilizing element 20, the production of a stabilizing element 20 with a substrate material arranged thereon can be carried out by two-component injection molding.
As a variant to only partial welding or connection to the basic body 10, it is possible that the substrate material 30 can be connected to the basic body 10 over the entire surface, for example adhesively bonded or welded over the entire surface. Since the stabilizing element 20, which is made of plastic or at least has a layer of plastic on the underside for connection to the substrate material, is provided with the substrate material 30, it is possible to make available a coupling element which is adapted to the material of the basic body 10, such that a direct cohesive or adhesive connection of the generally stiff stabilizing element 20 to the generally flexible basic body 10 is avoided. The indirect coupling of the stabilizing element 20 to the basic body 10 reduces the risk of tears forming, and optimized material properties can be obtained for the basic body 10 and the stabilizing element 20, without having to take into consideration a fundamental connectability of the two components to each other. For example, the stabilizing element 20 can have a high flexural strength, while the design of the basic body 10 can be optimized in respect of wearability, skin compatibility and elasticity.
A variant of the invention is shown in
A variant of the invention is shown in
Additional components 36 can be provided on the substrate material, for example a velcro fastener or a tightening loop, which can be applied or formed during the production of the substrate material 30, if appropriate in conjunction with the production of the connection to the stabilizing element 20.
The stabilizing element 20 can be prefabricated together with the substrate material 30 in an automated manner, such that a series of stabilizing elements 20 can be applied at intervals from each other on a substrate-material blank. From this blank, with the stabilizing elements applied thereon, it is then possible, as necessary, to cut out a suitable stabilizing element or several stabilizing elements together with an excess length of substrate material.
A further variant of the invention is shown in
A further variant of the invention is shown in
The side of the substrate material 30 directed toward the basic body 10 can be laminated with a TPU film, which can be generated by indirect heat input, for example via high-frequency or low-frequency excitation, melted, and connected to the material of the basic body 10.
The bottom view in
A variant of the invention is shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 118 617.8 | Nov 2011 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/004774 | 11/16/2012 | WO | 00 | 5/5/2014 |