The present invention generally relates to removeable casts for the foot. More particularly, it relates to “walker boots” having a lockable ankle joint.
On average, a human leg is lost to diabetes every 30 seconds. The annual cost of diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) in the United States has been estimated as being at least $15 billion per year. It has been shown that podiatric medical care can reduce the chance of amputation by up to 80%. Offloading the wound—i.e. keeping the patient's weight off the wound—has been shown to be an effective podiatric method in healing DFUs. The gold standard in offloading DFUs is total contact casting (TCC; see
Both TCC and RCW methods are based on immobilizing the ankle joint, resulting in a decline in peak plantar pressure and therefore offloading the plantar wounds. While ankle locking has been shown to be effective in offloading pressure on the wound, it unfortunately causes the ankle to become stiff (stiffness of connective tissues, e.g. tendons and ligaments) and may result in muscle atrophy. This additional level of stiffness amplifies the higher ankle stiffness already present in patients with diabetic neuropathy (compared to healthy or non-neuropathic diabetic patients). Also, atrophy of the calf muscle when accompanied with sarcopenia in geriatric patients may result in muscle dystrophy.
Increased ankle stiffness after offloading along with lower strength in the calf muscles has been shown to increase plantar pressure and therefore cause more rapid reoccurrence of DFUs. Because of this ankle stiffness, patients may remove an RCW to allow ankle movement. But this can result in the patients forgetting to don the RCW before resuming activities, thus hindering recovery. Range of motion (ROM) RCWs are available to help alleviate the ankle stiffness. In an ROM RCW, the ankle is allowed to pivot to desired limits but then can be locked. While a ROM RCW does allow for improved ankle stiffness, patients forget to lock the hinge when the leave the seated position and begin walking with the hinge unlocked, defeating the purpose of the restraint provided by the RCW.
A range of motion (ROM) removeable cast walker (RCW) is equipped with an ankle joint that may be locked and unlocked by the user. A first sensor is responsive to the locked/unlocked condition of the ROM RCW. A second sensor is responsive to the presence of a limb within the ROM RCW. A third sensor is responsive to weight borne by the ROM RCW. A radio transmitter may report the output of one or more of the sensors to a remote facility. The output of the sensors may also be recorded in a memory device on the ROM RCW for later downloading.
Previous efforts to encourage the correct use of RCWs have mainly focused on reminding patients to wear them after they have forgotten to wear them (or elected not to wear them). While these efforts are focused on what happens after the boot has been removed, less attention has been given to the reasons why the boots are removed in the first place. As mentioned before, additional ankle stiffness resulting from ankle locking by TCC and RCW offloading is inevitable. This parameter makes using such remedies uncomfortable and leads to poor adherence, such as patients removing an RCW. ROM RCWs alleviate the ankle stiffness issue but replace it with a basic therapy issue when the patient forgets to lock the ankle when leaving the seated position and beginning walking.
Devices according to the present invention include a ROM RCW with a lockable ankle joint and are able to detect and report whether the boot is being worn, whether the ankle joint is locked or unlocked and the weight-bearing status of the foot. Such devices can create alerting alarms/reminders if the boot is not worn or not worn appropriately (adherence component 1). Allowing the ankle to be relaxed in non-weight bearing conditions may result in more wear time of the boot (adherence component 2) and wearing the ROM RCW may be more pleasant if, in the unlocked condition, the user may control a video game with ankle rotations (adherence component 3).
In a smart ROM RCW according to the present invention, patients may unlock the ankle joint while the joint is not bearing weight—e.g. when the patient is sitting or lying down. This allows the ankle to relax and the soft tissue to be stretched, limiting ankle stiffness. To make wearing the smart ROM RCW even more acceptable (or even exciting) for patients, a gaming feature may be included in the boot, with a sensor in the foot section and mobile app, that may be played by doing ankle plantar flexion and extension. This game-controller feature not only improves adherence to instructions for wearing the smart ROM RCW, but it has two major benefits for wound healing and the remission after healing: A) Ankle exercise increases the rate of circulation and thus provides better delivery of oxygen and nutrients to the ulcer and therefore promotes healing; and, B) Ankle exercise helps to maintain muscle mass and decrease ankle stiffness, thereby promoting faster propulsion and lowering peak plantar pressure after recovery.
The pad or wrapper 10 is conventional in the art and is comprised of a polymeric foam cushioning material having a plush or pile exterior surface receptive of the hook members of fabric hook and pile fastening means. The polymeric foam is preferably preformed to conform to and mate with the posterior of the lower leg and the heel and sole of the foot of the patient, and includes opposed flap portions to be wrapped around the anterior surface of the lower leg and the side and upper surfaces of the ankle and the foot. If desired, the inner surface of the exterior or overlying one of the flaps may include hook type fabric fastening means for engagement with the exterior pile surface of the underlying flap to adjustably secure the wrapper about the foot, ankle and lower leg.
The shoe 12 comprises a rigid open top shell, suitably molded from a polymeric resin, having a bottom wall 20, side walls 22 and a heel 24, but no top or upper. Adjacent the heel, the side walls each extend upwardly to adjacent the malleolus of the patient's ankle and each has a semicircular cut-out in the top edge generally conformed to the lower margin of the malleolus. At this point, i.e., from the malleolus down to the sole, each side wall of the shoe is bulged outwardly, as indicated at 26, to form an internal vertical recess for reception of one of the support members or arms of the respective one of the hinges 16. The bottom or sole 20 of the shoe is curved continuously from the heel to the toe to complement the gait of the patient and is covered with a nonslip rubber or composition sole for purposes of safety in walking. The shoe 12 is illustrated in dashed lines in various angles of rotation at the ankle.
Touch sensors 40 may be provided at locations 42 and 44 as shown in
Alternatively, the presence of a leg in the smart ROM RCW 38 may be detected using capacitive sensors 50 at locations 52 in both sides of the smart ROM RCW 38 as shown in
A pressure sensor 60 at location 62, the proximal side of the foot near the heel as shown or the plantar side of the foot, near the ball, detects if the patient is standing or walking or is seated with no pressure on the foot, so that the pressure sensor 60 is a type of weight-bearing sensor.
In
Referring to
If the smart ROM RCW is being worn, in step 908 the microcontroller 100 checks the locked state of the smart ROM RCW by checking the lock sensor 106 or the capacitive sensors 90, 92, depending on the embodiment. In step 910, a determination is made if the hinge 16 is locked or unlocked. If locked, in step 912 the microcontroller 100 provides a good indication 914, such as a green LED no indication.
If the hinge 16 is unlocked, in step 916 the microcontroller 100 checks the pressure sensor 60 to determine if the patient is in a weight-bearing state. In step 918, a determination is made whether the patient is in a weight-bearing state. If not, in step 920 the microcontroller 100 provides a good indication 922, such as a green LED no indication. If the patient is in a weight-bearing state, in step 924 the microcontroller 100 provides a warning, such as an audible alarm from the buzzer 108 and a flashing LED no, to alert the patient to the need to lock the hinge 16.
Any change of state, worn or not worn, locked or not locked, weight-bearing or not weight-bearing, can be provided to a patient or caregiver smart phone and to a cloud storage location for use by the doctor.
Table 1 provides the notification state in a table format.
To encourage improved healing, a gaming feature can be incorporated into the smart ROM RCW. Motion sensors, such as inertial sensors, can be implemented in the shoe 12 and active only if the hinge 16 is unlocked and the patient is not bearing weight. Then, with movement of the foot, for example, plantar flexion and extension or rotation at the ankle, signals from the inertial sensor can be used as a game controller for a video gaming system, similar to a keyboard or joystick, to play video games that understand the input mechanism. By controlling a video game by plantarflexion and dorsiflexion of the foot when the ankle joint is unlocked and the boot is not weight-bearing allows for: a) maintaining or lowering the stiffness of the ankle, b) increasing blood flow to the wound for faster healing, and c) decelerating muscle atrophy or dystrophy in older adults that may also be affected by sarcopenia by maintaining muscle volume/quality through exercise.
By determining if the patient is wearing the smart ROM RCW, then determining if the hinge is unlocked and then if the patient is in a weight-bearing state, an alarm or warning is provided to remind the patient to lock the hinge. This allows the use of a smart ROM RCW to alleviate ankle stiffness but at the same time enforce treatment compliance should the patient forget to lock the hinge prior to standing or walking.
The foregoing presents exemplary embodiments of a system embodying the principles of the invention. Those skilled in the art may be able to devise alternatives and variations which, even if not explicitly disclosed herein, embody those principles and are thus within the scope of the invention. Although exemplary embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, they are not intended to limit what this patent covers. One skilled in the art will understand that various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention as literally and equivalently covered by the following claims.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/829,399, filed on Apr. 4, 2019, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62829399 | Apr 2019 | US |