The present invention relates to a sanitary bag for receiving at least one part of the body, in particular the penis.
Many products for collecting bodily fluids, e.g. urine, are known on the market. Particular mention may be made of liners, diapers for babies and infants, and incontinence diapers. A common aspect of these products is that they are generally available on the market as so-called unisex products, the basic shape being adapted to the human anatomy. There are also many products specially developed for women, whereas aids developed for men are virtually unknown or are designed in such a way that they do not provide wearing comfort.
DE 698 09 666, for example, discloses a urine-receiving pad for men, which is formed by a bag provided with an opening and consists of at least one laminated sheet comprising a liquid-permeable inner layer, a liquid-impermeable outer layer, and an absorbent core provided between the two layers. This bag can be applied to a penis by inserting the penis into the opening, wherein flat or linearly elastic elements are arranged in pairs along an opening edge, such that the elastic elements, in a state in which they are deformed by buckling, engage the penis by means of elastic restoring forces.
DE 10 2008 020 606 B1 discloses a sanitary article of the type mentioned at the outset, which sanitary article has a sleeve-shaped main body for attaching to the body part, wherein the main body has an opening larger than the body part, and this main body has a steeply rising flank which, after reaching a peak, merges into a flat trailing edge, and the main body has a flap, wherein the opening can be made smaller by turning the flap back over the area of the main body located over the body part. The main body is usually cone-shaped.
A common aspect of the products known from the prior art is that they have a shape that makes industrial production complicated and therefore expensive.
The object of the present invention was therefore to make available a sanitary bag of the type mentioned at the outset, which is composed of simple geometric shapes and permits simple and cost-effective production, also with high-speed machines.
The present invention therefore relates to a sanitary bag for receiving at least one part of the body, in particular the penis, which sanitary bag is composed at least of a blank with two portions A and B which each have the shape of a quadrilateral and are folded along a fold line, wherein the two portions have the same length from the fold line to their edge facing away from the fold line, characterized in that an absorbent insert is arranged on the inside of the blank.
The sanitary bag according to the invention is composed of a blank which is folded along a fold line, wherein this folded shape forms the outer shape of the sanitary bag. The blank will usually be obtained from web material. To permit production in high-speed machines and also to minimize the amount of scrap, i.e. the non-usable remainders of the material from which the blank is cut out, the blank has the simplest possible geometric shape. Preferably, the portions each have the shape of a quadrilateral.
In a preferred embodiment, the blank has the shape of a square or a rectangle. This shape has the advantage of causing less scrap material compared to other shapes.
The blank is folded along the fold line, such that the portions are superposed. The edges of the blank that lie opposite the fold line form the opening for receiving the body part. The portions preferably have the same side length from the fold line as far as their edge facing away from the fold line.
If the blank is present in the shape of a square or rectangle, i.e. with four right angles, the fold line can either be located at the bottom of the sanitary bag, i.e. the edges of the blank that lie opposite the fold line form the opening for receiving the body part, or the fold line is located at a right angle to the opening. If the blank is present in the shape of a rectangle or a square, the blank can be folded along one of the two fold lines. If the blank is present in the form of a quadrilateral, the portions each having the shape of a trapezoid, the fold line forms the bottom portion of the article according to the invention.
The superposed edges of the portions adjoining the fold line are connected to each other. This connection can be made differently depending on the material from which the blank is made. For example, the edges can be connected to each other by gluing or welding, and in some cases also by sewing. This connection of the edges is preferably watertight, such that an escape of the bodily fluid through this connection of the edges is substantially avoided, preferably completely avoided.
In a preferred embodiment, the connecting edge is at a distance from the opening edge of the opening, i.e. the connection ends before the opening edge. In this way, a portion remains unclosed from the weld seam to the opening, as a result of which the opening is widened. This widening facilitates the insertion of the penis into the opening, i.e. the handling of the sanitary bag according to the invention.
The material from which the blank is made should be impermeable to liquids, the aim being to prevent urine or other bodily fluid from passing through the sanitary bag according to the invention in the direction of the clothes and soiling the latter. For optimal wearing comfort, it is preferable if the blank is made of a breathable material, i.e. a material that is permeable to water vapor but not to liquids. The material for the blank can be, for example, a breathable film, such as a perforated two-dimensional and/or three-dimensional film, a breathable SMS, nonwovens of natural or synthetic fibers, and/or a laminate of different materials, for example of nonwoven and breathable film (BIBS films=breathable film textile backsheet), as are also known for the production of the outsides of customary incontinence products.
According to the invention, an absorbent insert is arranged on the inside of the blank. The absorbent insert extends at least over a part of one of the portions; the absorbent insert preferably extends over both portions. However, the absorbent insert is preferably offset inward with respect to the edges. A single absorbent insert or several absorbent inserts can be arranged on the blank. In a preferred configuration, a single absorbent insert extends over both portions A and b, its edge being offset inward with respect to the edges. With respect to the edges that form the superposed closing edge, the distance between the absorbent insert and the edge should be so great that the superposed edges can be connected to each other without inclusion of the absorbent insert. The distance of the absorbent insert from the opening edge can be slightly greater, and this distance forms the bearing surface for the body part and should be chosen such that good wearing comfort is ensured.
In one possible embodiment, the sanitary bag according to the invention is multilayered and, in addition to the first blank, which usually faces outward, and to the absorbent insert on the inside, i.e. in the direction of the body part, it also has a further blank arranged over the absorbent insert. This blank is preferably made of a material permeable to liquids. The bodily fluid passes through this further blank in the direction of the absorbent insert. The purpose of this further layer is to quickly transport the bodily fluid away from the body part in the direction of the absorbent insert, where the fluid is taken up and stored. The first blank and the further blank preferably have the same size. The absorbent insert is encased by the two blanks. The two blanks can be connected to each other via a suitable connection, for example by welding with ultrasound. It is not necessary that the blanks are connected to each other in a watertight manner. The blanks should be larger than the absorbent insert, such that the absorbent insert is not included in the connection of the edges of the blanks.
The material from which the further blank is made is preferably a material permeable to liquids, for example a nonwoven, preferably a polypropylene/polyethylene nonwoven that is stretchable. The stretchability has the advantage that, when the absorbent body takes up liquid and its volume increases, it also does not change the surface of this further blank and gives the absorbent body room, without this further blank or the outwardly directed blank tearing.
For this reason, it has also proven advantageous if the absorbent core is slightly smaller than the volume formed by the outer blank and the further blank.
This absorbent insert serves to take up and permanently absorb the bodily fluid. Rewetting in the direction of the body part should preferably be avoided as far as possible. This absorbent insert is therefore preferably made from a material which is able not only to absorb bodily fluids, such as urine, but also to store them. Materials that are very suitable are those composed of oriented and/or unoriented fibers, in particular nonwovens of pulp and pulp-related materials, and also synthetic absorbent materials. The absorbent insert is preferably a nonwoven of cellulose fibers, such as an airlaid.
The absorbency of the absorbent core can be increased if it contains particles of superabsorbent polymers. For example, these can be incorporated directly during the production of the absorbent core.
In one possible embodiment, the absorbent insert is produced from a fibrous web of pulp fibers or an airlaid bed of pulp fibers (fluff pulp) which are guided through a calender composed of two embossing rollers. While generating an embossed pattern in the pressure area, the fibers are calendered in a punctiform or linear manner, without binding agent, and thus connected. An absorbent core has proven particularly useful that is produced by the method described in the European patent 1 032 342 B1.
Another suitable material is a polymer material with a honeycomb structure, as is described, for example, in the European patent application EP 2 444 046 A1.
The absorbent insert can be formed from an absorbent body as described above. This absorbent body can be surrounded by liquid-permeable layers in the manner of a casing, wherein the absorbent body can be fixed on one or both layers or is only loosely surrounded by these layers.
In order to prevent the absorbent insert from slipping on the blank of the sanitary bag, the absorbent insert can be fixed on the blank. The fixing can be carried out at discrete points or across the whole surface, using glue or other adhesive materials. Generally, the fixing of the blank is not necessary since the friction between blank and absorbent body is sufficient.
In a further configuration of the present invention, the sanitary bag according to the invention has means for making the opening smaller and for adapting the size of the opening to the circumference of the body part. Suitable means that can be used are a drawstring, an elastic rubber band or a binding means, with which one connecting edge can be turned back to the other one.
In a preferred embodiment, one connecting edge is turned back to the other connecting edge and is fixed in this position. To fix it, the turned-back connecting edge can, for example, have glue or another adhesive means which adheres at the point where it is fixed. The adherence should preferably be releasable. In a further configuration, a protruding binding means is mounted on the connecting edge to be turned back and has a corresponding adhesive which fixes the turned-back connecting edge and maintains the size of the opening in its adjustment. Examples of suitable binding means are elastic and non-elastic velcro tape, elastic and non-elastic adhesive tape, etc. This embodiment, in which one connecting edge is turned back to the other edge, has the advantage that the upper edge that bears on the body part remains smooth and is not puckered, as a result of which greater wearing comfort is achieved.
The present invention is explained in more detail with reference to the attached figures, in which:
The blank 2 is first of all turned back along the fold line F1. The side edges 5a, 5b and 6a, 6b then lying respectively on each other are then connected to each other in a manner known per se, for example by gluing, welding or sewing.
By means of the folding and closing, a pouch or a bag is formed which is open only along one edge, i.e. has an opening 11. The opening edges are the edges 4 and 7. The fold line F1 forms the bottom of the pouch and is arranged facing away from the opening 11.
In the third embodiment shown in
By means of the trapezoidal shape of the sanitary bag widening toward the opening 11, a flap 13 in the shape of a triangle is formed. For use, as is shown in
For use, the sanitary bag 1, in the state shown in
However, the sanitary bag can also be held on the body part without special binding elements or fixing means. In order to adapt the opening 11 to the circumference of the body part and, if appropriate, to give the user the feeling that the sanitary bag is not going to slip, elastic materials can be applied on the outside or inside of the blank 2, along the edges 4a and 4b forming the opening 11, or at a short distance from these edges, and they keep the opening 11 small by means of suitable pretensioning.
According to
In the embodiment shown in
The connecting edges 5, 6 and 7a, 7b in the embodiment according to
In the particular configuration shown in
Likewise in
In the simplest configuration, the bag-shaped sanitary bag has a blank 2 in which an absorbent body 3 is arranged. The absorbent body takes up the discharged bodily fluid and stores it. The blank 2 is intended to prevent the bodily fluid from escaping to the outside, i.e. in the direction of the clothes, and thus soiling the clothes.
Likewise, in all the embodiments, the sanitary bags according to the invention can also be multilayered. In one possible configuration, a further blank 10 is arranged on the inside over the absorbent body 3. This further blank 10 therefore forms the inside or inner wall of the sanitary bag during use. In this connection,
Another possible way of fixing the absorbent body is for the absorbent body 3 to be enclosed immovably by the blanks 2 and 10, with the connecting edges 5 and 6 at only a slight distance from the absorbent body.
If the multilayered structure according to
The embodiment shown in
The sanitary bag according to the invention is preferably produced from web material that is unwound from a storage reel and delivered to the machine. The material for the blank 2, for the absorbent insert 3 and also for optional further layers or blanks 10 is delivered as web material wound onto reels. The absorbent insert 3 is placed on the web material of the blank 2, the optional further layer is arranged thereover as a further blank 10 either at the same time or in a following step. The absorbent insert 3 and the web material for the blank 2 and the web material for the optional further blank 10 are cut to a suitable size in a subsequent method step. To facilitate the further production process, the superposed edges can be connected to each other, in order thereby to prevent the superposed blanks from slipping. The connection can be achieved, for example, by means of the ultrasonic welding already described above.
Thereafter, the blank produced in this way is folded along the fold line F1 or F2, and the edges 5a, 5b and 6a, 6b or 5, 6 and 7a, 7b thus coming to lie over each other are connected to each other to form a watertight connection. Preferably, the binding element 12 or the elastic material 14 is applied beforehand, i.e. before the edges are connected.
1 sanitary bag
2 blank, outer layer
3 absorbent insert
4 opening edge
5 connecting edge
5
a,
5
b connecting edge
6 connecting edge
6
a,
6
b connecting edge
7 edge, opening edge
7
a,
7
b connecting edge
10 blank, inner layer
11 opening
12 binding element
13 flap
14 elastic material
15 bearing surface
16 unclosed edge
17 connection
F1 fold edge
F2 fold edge
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20 2012 103 745.9 | Oct 2012 | DE | national |
20 2013 101 413.3 | Apr 2013 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2013/070241 | 9/27/2013 | WO | 00 |