The present invention relates to a hood, typically a disposable hood, of the type used by a healthcare operator, in particular a surgeon, in association to a protection helmet.
As it is known, the current surgical procedures provide that the surgeon wears a protective, generally instrumented, helmet thereover a, often disposable, hood is worn.
The latter covers the helmet, and then the subject's head, as well as the neck and portion of the chest. Over the hood, or better the thoracic portion thereof, then a gown is worn, generally of disposable type too.
The above-mentioned dressing apparatus aims at guaranteeing conditions of external complete sterility of the operating surgeon and it results, due to its nature, quite complex, above all in relation to the wearing modes. In fact, the hood is provided folded under sterility conditions and it includes a lens to be positioned at an appropriate dedicated opening. While unwinding the hood rear portion bringing the latter to cover the subject's nape and shoulders there is the risk that the external portion of the hood itself is touched, by the surgeon himself/herself or by the operator helping him/her, under not sterile conditions. For example, such portion can come in contact with the surgeon's arms or with other portions of the body not protected by the sterile gloves. This, actually, nullifies the harnessing of the surgeon and, however, in an often not perceived and then not remedied way.
Moreover, when the surgeon gets dressed autonomously, the wearing of the hood results to be extremely uncomfortable, in particular in the phase requiring the reversal of a portion thereof to cover the nape and the back. Such procedure involves unnatural motions of the arms which then cause discomfort to the surgeon himself/herself indeed in a phase preceding the operation in which he/she should keep rested and concentrated.
The same drawbacks occur even in relation to other applications of the hood of the above-mentioned type, not necessarily medical applications, and other operators, not necessarily healthcare operators, for example in the so-called “clean rooms” of the research and experimental laboratories.
The technical problem placed and solved by the present invention then is mainly to provide a protective hood allowing to solve the drawbacks mentioned above with reference to the known art.
Such problem is solved by a hood according to claim 1.
Preferred features of the present invention are set forth by the depending claims.
In the context of the present description, the terms “sagittal”, “front”, “anterior”, “lateral”, “posterior”, “upper”, “lower” and derivatives are assigned to hood elements or positions thereof and referred to the worn configuration of the hood itself, even in association to the anatomical definitions of the body of the operator who dresses it.
In general terms, the hood of the invention is of the type suitable to cover wholly, or almost wholly, the operator's head, neck and an upper part of the chest.
The hood of the invention provides a pair of strings (or “cheststraps”), attached to the rear portion of the hood covering the head, the neck and the upper part of the chest. Such strings can be grasped by the surgeon with sterile gloves and they allow him/her to wear autonomously and easily the hood, by pulling it in position without the risk of contaminating the external portion thereof.
Said strings are configured so as to allow to maintain—during wearing—a sufficient distance between the arms of the subject and the main body of the hood so as not to determine interference of the arms with the outside of the hood itself. Therefore, the risk of contamination between external portion of the hood, which is sterile, and subject's body, which is not sterile, reduces drastically.
Advantageously, the same two strings can be knotted, or however connected to one another, at the user's chest at the end of the wearing procedure. In this way, they keep in position the front, rear and side portions of the main body of the hood, in particular during the subsequent phase of wearing the gown.
Therefore, when the surgeon, or generally the operator, is wholly harnessed and ready for the work which he/she has to accomplish, the strings remain inside the harnessing, that is under the gown.
In other words, the strings are devised and positioned as help for a wearing procedure without contamination.
Other advantages, features and use modes of the present invention will result evident from the following detailed description of embodiments thereof, shown by way of example and not for limitative purposes.
The figures of the enclosed drawings will be referred to, wherein:
With reference to
Applicative variants can provide a use in other contexts in which a, in particular sterile, garment or harness is required, for example a clean room of a laboratory.
The hood 1 is apt to be sterilized and provided folded in a packaging, sterile too, according to modes which will be described hereinafter.
In the present embodiment, the hood 1 is of disposable type.
The hood 1 is meant to be worn over an instrumented surgical helmet, the latter shown schematically in
The hood 1 is generally symmetrical with respect to its own longitudinal axis L which, in use, corresponds substantially to the sagittal plane of the operator wearing it.
On the hood 1 an internal face, or side, 15 and an external face, or side, 16, can be identified so defined since the first one, after wearing, is in direct contact with the subject's body, whereas the second one indeed is faced towards the external environment. The latter face is the one which has to remain sterile even after wearing, in order not to contaminate the operating environment.
The hood is configured to cover completely the operator's head, neck and an upper part of the chest of the operator wearing it and this by means of its own enveloping main body 10. The latter is made of flexible material and preferably made of fabric.
The main body 10 is fixed, at its own front opening 18, on a peripheral region 21 of a front vision lens 20. The latter, in use, positions at least at the operator's eyes, preferably extending on a wide portion of the subject's face so as to guarantee an adequate and comfortable field of view during the surgical operation.
The vision lens 20 has connection means, in particular hooking means 22 in form of through-hole, at a corresponding hook-like appendix 41 of the surgical helmet 4.
The main body 10 is advantageously implemented in one single piece. Thereupon a front portion 11 and a rear portion 12 connected and made integral by means of two opposite side portions 13 and 14 can be identified.
The front portion 11 has a lower appendage 111 shaped like a bib, which extends, in use, on the operator chest. Preferably, it has squared, that is polygonal, shape, whereas the remaining peripheral edges of the main body 10, in particular at the rear portion 12 and side portions 13, 14, have generally rounded or bent profile.
The bib-like appendage 111 determines a greater longitudinal extension for the front portion 11 with respect to the rear one 12.
Respective first longitudinal ends of a first and a second lateral string, respectively 31 and 32, arranged on opposite sides with respect to the longitudinal axis L, that is to the sagittal plane of the operator, are fixed on the rear portion 12 of the main body 10.
Advantageously, the strings 31 and 32 are fixed to the main body 10 at a lower periphery of the rear portion 12.
The side strings 31 and 32, in use, extend laterally outside of the rear portion 12 and are configured to be grasped by the operator during wearing of the hood 1 in order to unwind said rear portion 12 and bring it to cover the rear part of the head, the neck and the chest, as it will be described shortly. The strings 31e 32 are configured so as to allow a distance to be maintained between the arms of the subject and the main body of the hood during wearing sufficient to avoid contact between the outside of the main body of the hood 1 and the arms of the operator who performs the wearing operation autonomously.
Advantageously, the strings 31 and 32 also have a length so as to be enveloped at the end of the wearing-on of the hood 1, around the chest to be knotted to one another on the front portion 11 of the main body 10, for example on the bib-like portion 111 thereof.
In a preferred embodiment variant, the strings have each one a length comprised in a range of about 20-150 cm.
In an embodiment, the strings 31 and 32 are each one in the form of a web, having limited thickness with respect to their own longitudinal and transverse dimensions. They can have a substantially rectangular plan shape.
The strings 31 and 32 can be made of the same material of the main body 11, in particular of fabric, or even of different material, for example with elastic properties.
The modes for wearing the hood 1 will be now described with reference to
As shown in
As shown schematically in
As shown in
At this point, as shown in
As shown in the sequence of
An alternative wearing mode, shown in the sequence of
Independently from which one of the two modes is adopted, the wearing can be completed with the sequence of phases shown in
The harnessing of the operator then can conclude with wearing a sterile gown, which covers the lower portion of the hood, in particular the subject's shoulders and chest, then by re-closing the bib-like appendage 111 and the strings 31 and 32 at least in the portion knotted on the front side.
The hood of the invention can even be provided as a set, or kit, with a surgical helmet like the one mentioned above and/or with a gown, the latter wearable over a lower part of the main body of the hood itself.
The invention then provides even a method of wearing a hood which, with reference to the above-described embodiment, provides the following main steps of:
The front portion 11 of the enveloping main body 10 can be pulled downwards before or after unwinding the rear portion 12.
As mentioned above, the hood 1 is preferably provided in folded form, advantageously sterile form, in a packaging which the surgeon or other operator opens at time of use (wearing).
The sequence of
The hood 1 is meant laid down on a working plane with the lens 20 rested upon the latter. The hood at first is in unwound configuration, preferably overturned, that is with the inner face 15 faced outside.
First of all, as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
At last, as shown in
The present invention has been sofar described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof. It is to be meant that other embodiments belonging to the its inventive core may exist, as defined by the protective scope of the herebelow reported claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102019000021555 | Nov 2019 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2020/060507 | 11/9/2020 | WO |