This application claims priority to UK Patent application GB1210076 4 filed on June 2012, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention concerns catamenial tampons.
2. Background
Worldwide the feminine hygiene and sanitary protection products industry including catamenial tampons is a multibillion dollar industry. In the UK alone, for example, the tampon market is worth about 100 million pounds a year. The technology of tampon design and construction receives considerable investment by the major corporations such as P&G (formerly Procter & Gamble), Playtex (Energizer Holdings), Lillets and Kimberley Clark, all competing to improve the product experience and gain market share.
A major selling point and target for technical design of tampons is, of course, optimal efficacy of absorption of the menstrual blood with the tampon to prevent any leakage and yet being comfortable to insert and wear and not restricting the user's freedom. Current tampons are generally marketed for trapping menstrual flows at ever increasing absorbencies, but are not designed for handling mixed viscosity flows including low viscosity blood and high viscosity blood clots. The shape of most modern tampons is dictated by these criteria and takes a broadly streamlined bullet-shaped form, being a smooth sided uniform diameter cylindrical form with a domed tip at the proximal end of the tampon that is inserted first into the vagina and having a draw-string at the distal and of the tampon for ease of subsequent withdrawal for disposal.
To assist comfortable insertion of modern tampons not only is the tampon itself streamlined but an applicator is often provided, normally comprising a pair of concentric telescoping tubes that enshroud the tampon during insertion of the applicator. When the applicator is inserted it is operated by pushing the inner tube inside the outer, which serves to propel the tampon out of the applicator into position in the vagina. Once the tampon is inserted it is designed to stay in place and absorb and hold menstrual fluid to prevent it leaking from the vagina. A tampon usually expands either width-ways or lengthways as fluid is absorbed.
In pursuing the goal of effective protection against leakage a number of modern designs of tampon have gone further to incorporate a hollow core construction of the tampon, some hollow only at the distal end for housing absorbed menstrual flow but some hollow at the proximal end and which flares open on moistening to present a central cavity/recess for capture of the menstrual fluid. Examples of such latter construction are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,335,720 (Glassman) and in U.S. Pat. No. 5,659,934 (Kimberley Clark).
As women approach the menopause, it is common for them to experience gelatinous clots in the menstrual fluid. Clots can also occur in younger women, Sometimes they are a result of medical conditions (eg: fibroids) or the fitting of an IUD device or taking the contraceptive pill. The manifestation of clots can severely interfere with the proper functioning of conventional tampons. In particular, gelatinous clots can simply slide over the convex tampon tip/proximal inserted end and pass down the sides around the tampon and leak out of the vagina because they are too thick to be absorbed by the smooth, compressed material. Also, the clots can stick to the side of the tampon which causes uneven absorption of the less viscous menstrual fluids, causing the tampon to leak before it is fully saturated.
Whereas hollow core tampons such as the patented tampons referred to above may be more effective at trapping clots than the original ‘solid’ bodied compacted fibre tampons they are still streamlined/bullet-shaped forms until deployed and are dependent upon high water content in the menstrual fluid to be properly deployed. They are not designed to address clots and do not fundamentally solve the problems.
Indeed at present the market for catamenial products aimed at least in part at pen-menopausal women or those with the afore-mentioned symptoms is dominated by devices that are not tampons at all but rather are costly to purchase and bulky moulded silicone cups that collect rather than absorb menstrual fluids and are designed to be worn much lower in the vaginal tract and designed to be reused. These present a solution to the problem but for many women they are not ideal as they are not comfortable or discreet, are too messy and require too much maintenance.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a tampon that addresses the problems described above
The summary of the invention is provided as a general introduction to some of the embodiments of the invention, and is not intended to be limiting. Additional example embodiments including variations and alternative configurations of the invention are provided herein.
According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a tampon adapted for use by women who suffer from clotted menstrual blood flow, wherein the tampon has a body comprising an elongate mass of compressed/moulded absorbent material with a proximal end (end that inserts first into a user's body) and a distal end and wherein the proximal end of the tampon is formed substantially enlarged with a greater lateral spread than the distal end of the tampon (in its compressed state) prior to wetting, and has at least one longitudinal cleft and/or has a crater or concavity at the proximal end that deepens as a void or hollow core through the tampon to capture and hold viscous/high viscosity or gelatinous menstrual fluid, the tampon being absorbent through its exterior/external lateral surfaces.
Unlike conventional tampons, the tampon of the present invention foregoes having a streamlined/bullet-shaped profile for ease of insertion and that flares only after wetting. Instead the tampon of the present invention is pre-formed to have a laterally enlarged or flared proximal end/head that is immediately ready to capture high viscosity menstrual material. The proximal end of the tampon is the end of the tampon that is inserted in the user first, while the opposing distal end is the end of the tampon that commonly has a drawstring attached for retraction of the tampon.
The form of the tampon overcomes the primary problem of non-deployment/inadequate deployment of the conventional tampon in use when the periods are relatively dry or the clot precedes low viscosity blood flow on which most tampons rely for expansion. It is unpredictable when a clot will arrive. It could be there moments after inserting a fresh tampon so the tampon is likely to be dry or could arrive sometime after the lighter fluids have been absorbed. In either event, if a tampon has just been removed, it is likely that the vagina will be relatively dry when the new one is inserted.
The tampon is preferably provided with a hollow core. The proximal end concavity may resemble a crater The concavity is preferably substantially central of the proximal end and opens into/deepens into the hollow core of the tampon body. The hollow core or longitudinal cleft(s) in the side(s) of the tampon body preferably extend for the majority of the length of the body and may extend the entirety of the length of the body.
The tampon's body may be of substantially uniform lateral spread/diameter for the majority of its length but enlarged at the proximal end or more preferably it may be laterally outwardly tapered for the majority of its length leading towards the proximal end. It is suitably approximately/substantially cylindrical or, where tapered, it is preferably substantially conical or frusto-conical in form. It may, for example, be approximately/substantially circular -cylindrical, -conical or -frusta-conical in form (circular in transverse section) or ovoid -cylindrical, -conical or -frusto-conical in form (ovoid in transverse section).
The enlarged proximal end of the tampon suitably is of enlarged diameter/lateral spread not only relative to the distal end of the tampon's body but also relative to the rest of the tampon's body.
As a particularly preferred further enhancement to the tampon it preferably has at the proximal end/tip a roughened fibrous surface. The compressed absorbent fibres forming the tampon, that normally present a sleek, smooth exterior to the tampon, suitably, at the proximal end of the tampon, are cut, combed or mechanically (or otherwise) disrupted to present a carpet of fibre ends to which the blood clots/gelatinous menstrual materials are more likely to cling and thus be trapped at the proximal end of the tampon.
Particularly preferably at least the external surface of the tampon distal end (eg the crater/concavity) has microfibers and in the preferred arrangements the tampon is formed throughout from a mix of fibres and microfibers. The fibres may be the conventional cotton, rayon or cotton/rayon mix of fibres, for example. The microfibers may be present as a relatively low percentage, suitably of the order of from 1% to 30% of the fibres forming the tampon, and still be effective. The use of microfibers can increase the effectiveness of the tampon capturing menstrual materials.
The tampon body of compressed absorbent material may be a one-piece/unitary body or an assembly of parts. The body may be formed as a compacted body into which a distal end concavity is subsequently formed by a press or other implement or may be moulded directly into a shape having the concavity. Where the tampon body is formed as an assembly of parts it may for example comprise a plurality of panels that are stitched, adhered or otherwise secured together.
In various embodiments, whether a one-piece/unitary body or an assembly of parts, the tampon body as formed/completed may resemble a partially open flower, with petals that slightly spread/separate towards the top of the flower/proximal end of the tampon body. The body may be cruciform as viewed from the distal end elevation or have any number of lobes/petals.
The shapes and ways in which an assembly of separate parts/lobes may be assembled together to the final form are diverse, They may, for example, be panels that are overlaid in a stack each at a different radial orientation to a neighbouring panel and initially resembling a windmill that is then folded forwardly and the panels held together in the final form, eg to resemble a part open flower. In another arrangement the tampon body is formed by rolling a panel of compressed absorbent material around itself. The panel may have an inclined top edge or the panel may be asymmetric being shorter at one end edge that becomes enrolled at the core of the body and thereby defines a concavity at the core of the body.
In another embodiment the tampon body is formed by placing two panels of compressed absorbent material back to back and stitching or otherwise securing them together at a central axis whereby the tampon body has a cruciform shape (X-shape) as viewed in proximal end elevation.
In view of the large head/proximally enlarged shape of the tampon it suitably is partnered with a tampon applicator for comfortable insertion, the applicator suitably being of uniform external width/diameter. The applicator internal chamber width/diameter is sized to accommodate the large head/proximally enlarged shape of the tampon proximal end and has a convex rounded tip/leading end that houses the enlarged concave proximal end of the tampon body. Where the internal chamber of the applicator is of uniform broad diameter and the distal end of the tampon body is relatively narrow, a centraliser guide may be provided in the applicator to keep the tampon body axially aligned with the applicator for smooth ejection. The centraliser is suitably formed at the leading pusher/plunger part of the applicator.
The invention as described and illustrated herein provides a much more reliable solution to the problems of the prior tampons.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will now be more particularly described, solely by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views of the figures. The figures represent an illustration of some of the embodiments of the present invention and are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner. Further, the figures are not necessarily to scale, some features may be exaggerated to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention
As used herein, the terms “comprises,” “comprising,” “includes.” “including,” “has,” “having” or any other variation thereof, are intended to cover a non-exclusive inclusion. For example, a process, method, article, or apparatus that comprises a list of elements is not necessarily limited to only those elements but may include other elements not expressly listed or inherent to such process, method, article, or apparatus, Also, use of “a” or “an” are employed to describe elements and components described herein. This is done merely for convenience and to give a general sense of the scope of the invention. This description should be read to include one or at least one and the singular also includes the plural unless it is obvious that it is meant otherwise.
Certain exemplary embodiments of the present invention are described herein and illustrated in the accompanying figures. The embodiments described are only for purposes of illustrating the present invention and should not be interpreted as limiting the scope of the invention. Other embodiments of the invention, and certain modifications, combinations and improvements of the described embodiments, will occur to those skilled in the art and all such alternate embodiments, combinations, modifications, improvements are within the scope of the present invention.
Referring to
The broader proximal end 1a resembles a crater, having a central concavity 3a with a raised rim 3b. At the centre of the concavity 3a it deepens/opens downwardly into a hollow core 3c of the tampon body 1 that can serve for trapping and anchoring/rooting clots/gelatinous material. The overall shape/form of the tampon body may be determined in a number of different ways that will be discussed later, in this first embodiment it is compressed and moulded from a single cylindrical block of the loose fibrous absorbent material, such as is shown in
The surface of the proximal end la at the concavity 3a and rim 3b may be cut, brushed, or otherwise treated to roughen it, ensuring that there are many fibre ends projecting from the surface. The end surface is may have this form through a roughening treatment step that is applied post-compression of the absorbent tampon material into the required tampon body shape or, in some embodiments, it may be created from the absorbent tampon material by the manner in which the tampon body is formed/assembled, eg by ensuring that the cut end of a substantially homogeneously aligned mass of fibres is presented as the proximal end of the tampon body 1. The relative roughness of the proximal end is and the microfibers in the tampon body 1 provide improved capture of the menstrual fluid/materials. From
The tampon body 1 is suitably substantially frusto-conical in form as moulded, and has a substantially trapezoidal shape as viewed in side elevation, as can be seen in
The external side surface/conic or circumferential surface of the body 1 is absorbent to allow fluids to be absorbed by the tampon. There is no impervious membrane/sheath or other moisture barrier around the tampon body 1 and much of the absorption of free-flowing, low viscosity blood can thus be at the sidewall—which is especially useful when the proximal end la of the tampon body 1 is at least partly covered/occluded by a clot.
The tampon body 1 is partnered with a tampon applicator 4, as shown in
In basic variations of the first embodiment of tampon body 1 the end elevation/transverse sectional shape of the tampon body 1 may be made oval rather than circular, or may be multi-lobed as will be described later. The method of manufacture of the tampon body 1 may be one of a number of different methods. Although described and illustrated with respect to
In the case of the
In the case of the
The body may in some variants lack a hollow core and simply have a concavity/crater at the proximal end. This latter configuration is most appropriate if the sidewalls of the tampon body define crevices/slits/clefts in which the clot may be trapped. In such a variant embodiment, illustrated in
Other mufti-lobed variants of the tampon body 1 are illustrated in
Numerous other embodiments and variants are conceivable within the sprit and scope of the invention and are embraced within the invention as set forth in the description and drawings and claims hereinafter
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications, combinations and variations can be made in the present invention without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Specific embodiments, features and elements described herein may be modified, and/or combined in any suitable manner. Thus, it is intended that the present invention cover the modifications, combinations and variations of this invention provided they come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
GB1210076.4 | Jun 2012 | GB | national |