Typical pillows are mass produced and designed to try to accommodate entire populations. They are designed merely to provide a cushion for people to slightly elevate their heads and necks while they are sleeping. The pillows are more or less one size fits all, and they can not be easily adjusted to conform to the unique body contour of an individual. For this reason, several companies have developed adjustable pillows. Users can try to adjust the size or shape of these pillows by, for example, inflating them or placing some type of an insert inside them. However, these pillows are difficult to use, and they are not very effective. Specifically, prior art pillows that have inserts are poorly designed because the inserts can only be put in one or two locations. They do not allow for perfect conformance with a user's spine or neck or shoulder. Moreover, these pillows do not allow for a variety of component materials of different sizes, shapes and hardness to be used in the inserts. They do not provide a means to easily position and re-position inserts within the pillow as the user's needs change, and they do not contain a plurality of inserts for each of the top and bottom ends or the middle of the pillow that allow for very precise customization to a user's body. They also do not provide a way to easily adjust the height of the pillow to meet an individual's unique needs.
An improved therapeutic pillow is provided having removable inserts that may be positioned and re-positioned to conform to a user's spine. The pillow has a casing, and it has an encasement or a main body that acts as a substrate on which inserts may be affixed. The casing, also referred to herein as a case or cover, helps to keep the pillow and all of its components together and can be made from terrycloth and fastened by a zipper means. Terry cloth has been found to be very comfortable and absorbent, which makes it desirable for use with a pillow. Alternative materials such as microfiber cloths, terrycloth-spandex blends, cotton-polyester blends or hypoallergenic fabric may be used for the case as well, and alternative fastening means such as hook and loop fasteners or snaps are also contemplated. The pillow encasement may be made from commercially available visco-elastic polyurethane foam (“memory foam”) to assist in providing comfort to the user while still providing support to the user's spine. Alternative materials such as those made from microfibers and/or latex, for example, are also contemplated as acceptable.
The encasement may be divided into top and bottom halves. The top half is the part that is in contact with the user's body. In embodiments of the invention that are used as cervical pillows, the user's head rests on the top half of the encasement, which is covered by the casing. The top half of the encasement can have slits made therein to aid in the pillow conforming around the user's head. The size and location of the slits may be modified to provide more or less conformance around the user's body. This is referred to herein as “press control.” In the alternative, different types of cuts or indentations within the encasement, such as punch outs, x's, semi-circles, or others, can be made to aid in press control.
The inserts placed inside the pillow provide support for the user's body. Particular embodiments may be used in therapy regiments for those who suffer from degenerative diseases of the cervical spine. In such embodiments, the pillow may provide support for the sub-occipital region and the supra-occipital region of the user's head. It can also provide support to the cervical spine, and it can be used to tilt a user's head in a correct orientation. For example, it can be used to control the support in the occipital—cervical junction. In fact, such embodiments of the pillow can be used in therapy regimens to correct the curvature of the spine through gradually re-positioning inserts and changing their sizes, shapes or hardness as a patient progresses in his therapy.
In an alternative embodiment, the encasement or main body can be in the form of a single piece with a unique contoured shape that cradles the head of a user and allows the user's shoulder to slide underneath at least a portion of the pillow. In such embodiments, the inserts can be placed on the outside of the pillow to adjust the height and other characteristics of the pillow so that the pillow better conforms to the user's unique body size and shape. The inserts can be shaped in such a way that height of the pillow increases without a change in the pillow's overall shape.
The pillows can be made from materials such as memory foam. They can also be made, for instance, by placing liquids, gels or particulate matters within suitable enclosing means such as pouches. For example, the particulate matters may be buckwheat, and the enclosing means may be a cloth pouch. The inserts can also have covering materials affixed to them or to any portion of them. The covering materials can be made from fabrics such as felt, hypo-allergenic fabrics or microfiber cloths for example. They can be made into different shapes and sizes to aid in supporting the user's body. They can also have different colors corresponding to the different sizes, shapes, hardness, component materials or level of conformity. The inserts may be affixed to the encasement or main body within the pillow using suitable affixing means, such as hook and loop fasteners, snaps, or double sided tape, for example. It has been found that if the fasteners are all hook portions of hook and loop fasteners, it makes it easier to fasten the inserts to the memory foam or felt substrate materials.
Certain embodiments of the pillow include measurement indicia in the inner portion of the pillow to more accurately place the inserts within it. The measurement indicia is preferably a grid that is imprinted on the bottom half of the encasement, but other means are contemplated. The measurement indicia can optionally be printed on materials such as felt, fabrics, and similar materials that can be adhered or affixed to the encasement. The inserts may be affixed and positioned and re-positioned more easily using the measurement indicia. This feature is particularly beneficial in instances in which the user is receiving therapy to correct the curvature of the cervical spine. A physician can note the exact size, shape, component materials and position of the inserts and make modifications as the therapy progresses. In addition, a doctor can write on the interior surface of the encasement certain things such as patient name, dates of therapy, colors of inserts, measurements of cervical curvature over time, and other notes related to the therapeutic protocols the patient is following.
The pillow disclosed herein is comfortable, simple to use, easy to manufacture, inexpensive to produce and very effective when used therapeutically. These and other features and advantages of the invention are described in more detail below.
Referring now to
In a preferred embodiment, the pillow encasement 8 is made from memory foam. It has been discovered that memory foam has unique characteristics related to the spinal support and contour functions of the pillow, which makes memory foam a particularly suitable component material for the invention. The encasement 8 shown in the drawings is made from a single rectangular sheet of memory foam that is thirty inches long, twenty inches wide and three quarters of an inch thick. The foam may be purchased from numerous sources known in the industry such as the Foam Factory of Michigan, CutFoam of England, and Foam Source of Colorado. In an embodiment, the encasement 8 has a top half 12 and a bottom half 14. The bottom half 14 of the encasement 8 shown in certain of the figures has a felt covering adhered to it, which aids in the imprinting of the measurement indicia 16 described herein. The felt also provides for a more effective substrate to which hook and loop fasteners can adhere. Felt material with an adhesive backing may be purchased from numerous sources known in the industry such as Sutherland Felt Company of Michigan, the Felt House of South Korea, or Aetna Felt Corporation of Michigan.
The top half 12 of the encasement 8 shown in the drawings has a press control means 18 in the form of slits 18 made therein to aid in the pillow 2 conforming around the user's head. There are four slits 18 cut in the encasement 8 shown in the drawings, and they are located in the center of the top half 12. The length of the central slit is five and one half inches, the length of the two slits on either side of the central slit is five inches, and the length of the outermost slits is three and one half inches. Other sizes, shapes and orientations of the press control means 18 are contemplated. The press control means 18 can be imparted using a knife, scissors or other suitable means more adaptable for mass production as are known in the art.
The inserts 4, 5 placed inside the pillow 2 shown in the drawings are made from different types of materials. A wedge shaped insert 4 that is made from memory foam and that has a felt covering 20 is shown in
Inserts 4 may have fasteners 22 affixed to their tops in addition to their bottoms, as shown in
A preferred embodiment depicted in
As noted above, cloth and felt having different colors can be used on the inserts 4, 5, 26 to more easily identify a corresponding size, shape or hardness. This will help physicians, patients or other end users of the pillow 2 more easily identify which insert 4, 5, 26 they should use in a given application. For example, inserts 4 that are to be located on the lower edge 24 can be colored green. Inserts 26 located on the upper edge 28 can be colored yellow. Blue dots can be placed on inserts 4, 26 that are two inches thick, while red dots can be placed on inserts 4, 26 that are two and one half inches thick. Many different color combinations and identifying features can be used, but simple and easy to use combinations would make the pillow 2 more user friendly.
A surprising effect is felt when using wedge shaped inserts 4 on the front most and back most portions of the bottom half 14 of the encasement 8 and one tubular insert 5 in the middle of the bottom half 14 as shown in
Certain embodiments of the pillow 2 include measurement indicia 16 in the inner portion of the pillow to more accurately place the inserts 4, 5, 26 within it. The measurement indicia 16, as shown in the drawings, is preferably a grid that is imprinted on the bottom half of the encasement 14. The grid can be in a form that includes a horizontal x-axis 30 that runs along the width of the encasement 8 from left to right and a vertical y-axis 32 that runs along the length of the encasement 8 from top to bottom. In a preferred embodiment shown in
The cradle angle 40 can range from between fifteen degrees from horizontal to about sixty degrees from horizontal to fit the unique needs of an individual user. A cradle angle 40 of forty five degrees, for example, has been shown during experimental tests to be particularly effective for a wide range of patients. In addition, a lifting insert 4 such as the one shown in
While particular embodiments of the present pillow with one or more inserts has been described herein, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made thereto without departing from the invention in its broader aspects and as set forth in the following claims.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/325,345 filed on Apr. 18, 2010.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61325345 | Apr 2010 | US |