The present invention is related to the application of thermal therapies. More specifically, the present invention relates to specially designed and constructed garments that provide a direct source of heat or cold to assist the wearer to alter or maintain a desired body temperature. More specifically, the present invention improves the prior art by utilizing significantly insulated pockets containing a thermal device that is individually compressed upon strategic locations of the body proven to be effective in warming or cooling a person or animal. The present invention is useful for the wearer to maintain a desired or necessary body temperature in a variety of environmental conditions, constructed in a modular fashion allowing said wearer to control said thermal support, and reduces the risk of temperature related injuries.
In every part of the world, people and animals alike, suffer from challenges controlling their body temperatures. In cold conditions, losing body heat (hypothermia) is a significant risk to a person's health and can injure and kill quickly. In fact, from 1999 to 2011, 16,911 people died from hypothermia, an average death-rate of 1,301 people killed per year in the United States. In warm environments, heat related injury is also a major problem. Heat related injury (hyperthermia) ranges from limiting a person's activity levels, to heat exhaustion, and even death from heat stroke. From 1999-2011, approximately 8,500 people have been reported to have died from heat stroke in the United States. Furthermore, survivors of heat stroke can and have suffered a lifetime of cognitive challenges due to brain damage caused.
In the medical community and athletic world, temperature management is a constant concern and challenge. Utilized heavily in emergency medicine and surgery, manipulating a patient's body temperature is common and necessary during and after surgery, aids in saving organs like the heart, kidney, or brain, and is used as a healing therapy post surgically. Furthermore, patients with diseases like muscular sclerosis have daily challenges maintaining body temperatures and do not have access to affordable, non-restrictive cooling methods that could assist them to live a more normal lifestyle. Lifestyle limitations include field of work, amount of exercise, time spent in hot environments, and even types of clothing patients suffering from M.S. can wear.
Regarding the sports field, athletes suffer from hypothermia in cold or wet environments as well. Innovations in technology are constantly searching for innovative ways to keep an athlete warm without continually adding heavy and bulky clothing or gear. In warm environments, athletes routinely reach body temperatures in the 101-105 degree Fahrenheit range. This presents a two-part problem for athletes. Primarily, safety is paramount. Some athletes compete in ambient temperatures around 100 degrees Fahrenheit and add heavy, heat trapping equipment like helmets and padding. These athletes are in extreme danger when training or competing in excessively hot environments. Secondarily, an athlete's performance suffers in the heat. Athletes are not able to reach the physical levels they require and desire due to the body's natural mechanisms of protection through heat. It is well studied and proven that the body will limit physical output in high temperature environments. Currently, there are no options for athletes to help reduce the risk of overheating during exercise that is light-weight, non-restrictive to movement, and is adjustable. Furthermore, children are more susceptible to succumbing to Exertional Heat Stroke than adults. Some available options are heavy, bulky for the wearer, use expensive materials and thus are difficult to financially afford, and do not provide adequate thermal effect, in particular, inadequate cooling options due to a misunderstanding of human anatomy. As such, the current solutions for hyperthermia or hypothermia are not designed for strenuous athletic activity.
Another challenge with the current products available is a lack of available options for the wearer. There is no variability to accommodate the needs of most people due to size, shape, lost anatomy, or mobility. Indeed, other activities like military personnel, police, medical workers and others work in high temperature and low temperature environments in standardized uniforms. No advanced solutions exist that can be easily integrated into a manufacturing process for standard uniforms.
A preferred solution for these challenges would be lightweight and non-restrictive to the wearer. The wearer should be able to play sports or conduct physical activity with little to no restriction of movement. Such a device would apply direct cold or heat upon strategic locations on the body such as pulse-points. Pulse-points, arterial blood flow most superficial to the surface of the skin, are well known to be accessible and easily capable of transferring heat to or from the body. In fact, application of heat or cold to pulse-points is often used in the medical field today. The preferred device would take the proven methods of altering body temperature by targeting pulse-points and in part large muscle groups. Ideally, the device would be modular in construction as to allow the wearer to add or subtract thermal sources as needed or desired. In addition, as each person's anatomy is unique, the preferred invention would have iterations that could accommodate virtually any body type, have options for several different parts of the body, and include methods of adjustment to improve fit and comfort for the wearer.
Additionally, garments in general wear out quickly and garments used in athletics and professions with high levels of physical activity can wear out even faster. The preferred solution would utilize manufacturing techniques and materials not currently used in this field that prolong the thermal effects of the preferred garments, while reducing costs so that the product will be affordable to manufacturers and customers alike. Furthermore, a preferred solution would also be able to be integrated into the manufacturing of other clothing like standard uniforms. This integration would allow workers to conform to uniform policy but also gain a greater sense of control of their personal temperature management. In addition, a preferred embodiment could integrate well with other types of casual and fashionable clothing like jackets, hats, shirts and pants without the appearance of athletic clothing.
Lastly, a preferred solution would take into account an improved understanding of human anatomy. The common myth is that cold constricts all blood vessels and thus reduces blood flow which in turn reduces the thermal exchange of thermal support devices. However, arterial pulse-points cannot be constricted from mild external cooling and therefore can withstand a significantly colder application from said thermal devices. By providing a significantly colder thermal device in particular, the wearer will have improved body temperature control in the heat.
To overcome the challenges outlined above, the garments devised consists of high performance sports apparel with integrated and highly insulated pockets that rest near the wearers pulse-points. One preferred embodiment of the present invention utilizes thermal devices to provide either heat or cold in conjunction with compressive fabric to ensure adequate pressure is used upon the pulse-point of the wearer. The preferred embodiment would include adjustable strapping to increase or decrease compression as needed. One iteration of the preferred invention would allow the combination of compression material and pockets to be integrated into a variety of clothing types including shirts, pants, sleeves for arms and legs, full body suits, and neck wraps among other variations. This modular approach reduces unnecessary weight from said apparel and allows the wearer to select where the thermal support devices will be targeted. The said insulated pockets allow for said thermal devices to extend the duration of action as the ambient temperatures of the environment will have a significantly reduced effect upon the thermal devices. For example, if utilizing a cold thermal device in warm weather, the insulated pocket ensures that the cold thermal device does not absorb as much heat from the environment as a non-insulated pocket would absorb and result in reduced performance of the cold thermal device. The insulated pocket in turn will allow for much colder or warmer thermal devices that have a greater warming or cooling effect upon the wearer. In addition, the specially insulated pockets reduces costs for thermal devices as said thermal devices are readily available and inexpensive. Current thermal devices can be used with similar benefits as costly phase change material (PCM) composed thermal devices. Furthermore, providing significantly colder thermal devices has proven to effect body temperature to a greater extent and improves the results for the objective of altering one's body temperature.
The above features and descriptions of the present invention are disclosed herein and will become apparent from the following descriptions of preferred embodiments.
While the present invention has several exemplary iterations and embodiments described herein, the present invention is not limited to the specific examples illustrated. The garments described herein, can be worn by men and women, adults and children, and can be worn as outerwear or undergarments. Furthermore, iterations of the preferred embodiment of this invention is not limited to human beings as size iterations could be manufactured to fit a variety of animals. For the purposes of this application, examples of the preferred embodiment of this invention will only include garments constructed for human beings. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the invention is also not limited to, proportions, relative sizes, figures or shapes, or materials in the illustrations.
The material for this garment (103) is a stretchy fabric that provides mild compression of the pockets (101) to the pulse-points. An example of an acceptable fabric and by no means limits this embodiment to said fabric is Lycra made by the Dupont Company. The garment (103) covers the entirety of the arm from the wrist to the axilla.
Also depicted is a generic thermal device (102) understood to be placed inside said pockets (101).
Also depicted is a generic thermal device understood to be placed inside said pockets (101).
Also depicted is a generic thermal device (102) understood to be placed inside pockets (101).
Also depicted is a generic thermal device (102) understood to be placed inside pockets (101).
For all descriptions and illustrations for the examples detailed in
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 62383286 | Sep 2016 | US |
Child | 15693217 | US |