The disclosure of the present patent application relates generally to podiatry, and particularly to various embodiments of a self-adjusting tool for correcting ingrown toenail that use self-adjusting elastic tension to lift the ingrown lateral edges of an ingrown toenail.
An ingrown toenail (also known as onychocryptosis or unguis incarnates), or a deformed toenail, is a common form of nail disease. It is an often painful condition in which the toenail grows so that it cuts into one or both sides of the nail bed (or paronychium). Mild to moderate cases are often treated conservatively with warm water and epsom salt soaks, antibacterial ointment and the use of dental floss. If conservative treatment of a minor ingrown toenail does not succeed, or if the ingrown toenail is severe, surgical treatment may be required. A so-called “gutter splint” may also be improvised by slicing a cotton-tipped wooden applicator diagonally to form a bevel and using this to insert a wisp of cotton from the applicator head under the nail to lift it from the underlying skin after a foot soak.
For more severe cases, surgical treatment may be carried out by a podiatrist. This is typically an in-office procedure requiring local anesthesia and special surgical instruments. The surgical approach is the removal of the offending part of the nail plate, referred to as a wedge resection. If the ingrown toenail recurs despite this treatment, destruction of the sides of the nail with chemicals or excision is performed, a procedure known as a matrixcestomy. Although surgical treatment for ingrown nails is more effective at preventing the nail from regrowing inwards as compared to non-surgical treatments, the pain, healing time and inconvenience to the patient must be considered. Thus, a self-adjusting tool for correcting ingrown toenail solving the aforementioned problems is desired.
The self-adjusting tool for correcting ingrown toenail uses elastic self-adjusting tension to lift the ingrown lateral edges of an ingrown toenail and to correct deformation of the toenail at the root base. In a first embodiment, the tool includes two identical leaf springs, each having a flat end and a band forming a flat loop at the opposite end. The two springs are interlocked by sliding the flat end of one spring through the band of the other, and the free ends are glued to lateral edges of the ingrown toenail to lift and flatten the toenail by elastic tension. As the toenail flattens, the leaf springs self-adjust or slide toward each other.
In a second embodiment, two flat loop bands are glued to opposite lateral edges of the ingrown toenail and a leaf spring of suitable length has opposite ends inserted into the bands to raise the lateral edges by elastic, contracting tension. In a third embodiment, the bands are replaced by annular sleeves and the flat leaf spring is replaced by a spring steel rod. Multiples rods may be placed in parallel. In a fourth embodiment, a flat loop band is glued to a lateral edge of the ingrown toenail and the leaf spring is T-shaped, having the end of elongate shaft inserted into the band and the crossbar of the T-shaped head glued to the opposite lateral edge of the toenail to flatten the toenail by elastic, retrievable tension.
These and other features of the present disclosure will become readily apparent upon further review of the following specification and drawings.
Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
The self-adjusting tool 10 for correcting ingrown toenail uses elastic, self-adjusting tension to lift the ingrown lateral edges of an ingrown toenail N to flatten the toenail. As shown in
Once adjusted to the proper length, the free ends 16a, 16b can be fixed to the lateral edges of the ingrown toenail N by a layer of adhesive A. The leaf springs 12a, 12b bear against the middle of the toenail N, and the resiliency of the springs 12a, 12b urges the free ends 16a, 16b to pull the curved or curled lateral edge(s) of the ingrown toenail N upward to flatten the toenail N and relieve pressure of the curled nail edges pressing into the toe T. As the toenail N is lifted, the leaf springs 12a and 12b slide toward each other, thereby adjusting the total length of the tool 10. The sliding action of one leaf spring with respect to the other as the toenail N slowly flattens allows the self-adjusting tool 10 to self-adjust in length and configuration, e.g., from a curved configuration to a linear configuration.
In use, a thick ingrown toenail may need to be thinned by scraping the toenail N until the toenail is soft, and/or chopping off part of an excessively long toenail N. After that,
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It is to be understood that the self-adjusting tool for correcting ingrown toenail is not limited to the specific embodiments described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the generic language of the following claims enabled by the embodiments described herein, or otherwise shown in the drawings or described above in terms sufficient to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the claimed subject matter.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2018/014833 | 1/23/2018 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62511325 | May 2017 | US |