The instant application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/208,892 filed on Aug. 24, 2015.
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The current invention relates to physical rehabilitative therapeutic equipment used for exercising the upper extremity of a person and more particularly to a portable solution for patients such that exercises can be performed at any time outside of a physical therapy facility.
Physical rehabilitative thereapeutic equipment is used to treat a person's body by using physical activity through active, passive or active-assistive range of motion stretching. It is a common problem that healthcare providers want to educate patients on home exercise programs, but need equipment in the home to achieve certain exercises. Because therapy equipment is often expensive, and because an episode of care may only last a few months, most patients do not wish to purchase expensive equipment designed for therapy clinics for their homes. This limits a home exercise prescription to either use items that a patient already has in the home, or that uses items that are expensive to purchase.
An extensive line of inexpensive rehabilitation products exists to provide patients with the tools they need for specific home exercises. At present, one piece of equipment utilized in the vast majority of therapy clinics that does not have an inexpensive home-use counterpart is commonly called a finger ladder. The finger ladder is used to provide therapy to a user's upper extremity such as the shoulder, arm, elbow, wrist, hands and/or fingers.
The prior art has illustrated several clinic versions of the finger ladder. All are mounted to the wall with screws and/or anchors. The high entry level price for these finger ladders, added to their design of requiring permanent mounting, makes them impractical for home use. While many healthcare clinicians prescribe finger walking up the wall with no device at all, the full scope of exercises that can be performed on finger ladders in therapy clinics cannot be performed in the home without one. Accordingly, there exists a need for a method and apparatus that provides an inexpensive and portable home version of finger ladders utilized prevalently in therapy clinics.
The present invention is a finger ladder comprising a board that has a greater length than its width with alternating parallel rungs and grooves formed in the board that run up and down the boards length is its front surface. The rungs have a flat surface on their top edge and a beveled surface on their bottom edge. The board also has at least one slot formed through the board with such slot being formed in the uppermost groove and also formed in various other groups for purpose of height installation. The slots are used in conjunction with a support strap having a permanent stop formed on one end and a loop formed on the other end such that a removable stop can be inserted once the strap loop end has been inserted through the back of the slot on the finger board such that it advances to the front of the finger board.
Specific advantages and features of the present assembly will be apparent from the accompanying drawings and the description of several illustrative embodiments of the present invention.
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There are also shown apertures 40 in the corners of the ladder 8 that can be used with means to install the finger ladder 8 to permanently mount the finger ladder 8 with fasteners such as screws or nails. Additionally, there can be used cords which run through said apertures 40 and have a stop tied onto them such that when they are inserted over a door top edge and the door is closed the finger ladder 8 is suspended from the top of the door by the being pinned against the back of the door and the door jamb. These methods of installing the finger ladder 8 are various means by which installation can be accomplished.
The finger ladder 8 can be made of wood, plastic, composite material, metal, carbon fiber and other materials. In a preferred embodiment the finger ladder 8 is made out of wood or plastic such that the grooves 12 can be formed by the process of routing thereby simultaneously producing the grooves 12 and rungs 14. Specifically, hardwood laminate plywood is an ideal choice due to its inexpensive cost, sufficient strength, and ease of manipulation. In one embodiment, the finger ladder 8 is formed from 0.75 inch plywood and is 3.75 inches wide. The rungs are 9/16 inches thick at their base and the flat top edge 28 of the rung is ΒΌ inch thick. The use of the bottom beveled edge 30 allows the rungs 14 to have adequate strength but to also allow clearance of a user's fingers. The grooves 12 are three inches wide and the side rails of the finger ladder 8 are three-eighths inches thick which allows sufficient rigidity of the finger ladder 8. The ladder 8 has thirty rungs 14 in one embodiment.
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The principles, embodiments, and modes of operation of the present invention have been set forth in the foregoing specification. The embodiments disclosed herein should be interpreted as illustrating the present invention and not as restricting it. The foregoing disclosure is not intended to limit the range of equivalent structure available to a person of ordinary skill in the art in any way, but rather to expand the range of equivalent structures in ways not previously contemplated. Numerous variations and changes can be made to the foregoing illustrative embodiments without departing from the scope and spirit of the present invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180056110 A1 | Mar 2018 | US |