The present invention related in general to a toothbrush and methods of making and using it. It more particularly relates to such a toothbrush, which is compact in size and may be safely used by prison inmates.
There is no admission that the background art described in this section legally constitutes prior art.
Prison and other detention systems monitor devices permitted to be used by inmates to prevent the use of otherwise safe device as a weapon. For example, conventional toothbrushes are not permitted to be used by many prison systems because they may be fashioned into a pointed shaft or rod or otherwise used as a shank for a sharp object such as a razor blade, which could be used to endanger other inmates as well as security personnel.
In an attempt to provide a safe alternative toothbrush for use by inmates for dental hygiene purposes, a toothbrush is currently being used which includes a brush head and a very short handle. The handle is so short that it must be grasped by only the thumb and forefinger of the user. However, such a toothbrush is awkward to use. The fingers of the user may be required to enter the mouth to reach all of the teeth. Such a difficult to use toothbrush may result in inadequate teeth cleaning, and be awkward and uncomfortable to use. Such ineffectual cleaning procedures may cause, or at the least contribute to, poor dental hygiene, thereby leading to costly dental procedures in some instances.
The following is a brief description of the drawings:
The disclosed embodiments relate to a toothbrush and methods of making and using it, wherein an elongated body has a bristle brush head portion and a handle portion. The body is composed of flexible material so that the handle portion can be grasped in the hand of the user, and the user can flex the elongated body into a substantially rigid position for teeth brushing purposes.
According to other embodiments, the length of the body is up to about 4.5 inches.
According to still other embodiments of the invention, the material of the body may be composed of an extrudable elastomer selected from the group consisting of silicone, neoprene, EPDM, nitrile, fluoroelastomers, natural rubber, styrene-butadiene rubber, thermoplastic elastomers, polyvinyl alcohol, PMMA, polyamide, polyester terephthalate, polycarbonate, polyetherimide, polyethylene (LDPE, HDPE, LLDPE, and blends), polypropylene and copolymers, polysulfone, polyvinyl chloride, viton, PUNA nitrile, carboxylated nitrile, polysulfides, alpha olefin elastomers, conjugated diene elastomers, hydrogenated diene elastomers, ethylene carboxylate, ethylene-propylene-diene elastomers, functionalized ethylene-vinyl acetate, SB-diblock copolymers, SBS and SIBS-triblock copolymers, and acrylic rubber.
According to further embodiments of the invention, there is provided a method of using a toothbrush by grasping a handle portion in the hand of the user, and pressing on a portion of the elongated body of the toothbrush with a digit of the user to flex the elongated body into a substantially rigid flexed position. The teeth may then be brushed for cleaning purposes. According to the disclosed embodiments, the pressing on the body may include moving the digit of the user into contact with a digit engageable portion of the body, and the flexed position may include the brush head portion of the toothbrush disposed at an angle of about 45 degrees relative to the handle portion.
Referring now to the drawings, and more particularly to
A digit engageable irregular surface 20 on the upper surface of the intermediate portion 18 is adapted to be engaged by a digit of the user to help flex it into a substantially rigid position for brushing the teeth. The digit engageable irregular surface 20 includes a rigided surface 21 formed of projections or ridges such as the ridges 23 and 25 to facilitate grasping the body 12 with a digit of the user. While it is shown and described that the thumb of the user may engage the surface 20, it is contemplated that a finger such as an index finger may also be preferedly be used to press on the surface 20, instead of the thumb.
As best seen in
According to an embodiment of the invention, as shown in
In use, the digit such as the thumb, index finger or other may act as a guide to place the brush head portion 14 in an approximate 45 degree angle relative to the handle portion 16, to steady the head portion 14, to help direct the head portion 14 into the mouth and place the head portion 14 into engagement with the teeth, and to steady the flexible intermediate portion 18 and head portion 14, while using the brush 15 in the act of brushing the teeth.
The placement of the digit such as the thumb, index finger or other on or near the ridges of the irregular surface 20 helps to alleviate slippage if the body 12 becomes wet. The ridges such as ridge 23 and 25 may be increased or decreased in number and arrangement or the irregular area expanded in area or length.
For the purposes of safety (i.e. prison market) the length of the body 12 of the toothbrush 10 should be up to approximately 4½ inches in length. More preferably, the length of the body 12 is between about 3.0 inches and 4.5 inches. Still more preferably, the length of the body 12 is between about 3.5 inches and about 4.5 inches. The most preferred length of the body 12 is about 4.5 inches.
The head portion 14 may have a slightly wider head portion 14 as shown in
It should be understood that the toothbrush 10 may be used for a variety of purposes. It may be used for cleaning the teeth of animals such as pets. The toothbrush 10 may be used in travel kits due to its compact size. For such applications, a harder material may be used, and result in less reliance on the digit pressing on the irregular surface 20 to guide the head portion 14 and the length of the brush 15 may vary. For example, a longer handle portion 16 and less flexible material may be employed for a larger pet.
The more flexible the materials, the less safety risk (for the prison environment). The hardness of the material directly affects the flexibility. Different hardness of the material or different materials used, may tailor the toothbrush 10 to meet a range of safety concerns needed from maximum security prisons (the highest) down to minimum security prisons.
The bristles may be the same type or quality as are found in conventional toothbrushes, and may be soft, medium or firm. Oval shaped bristles may be employed, but other shapes such as square may be employed as well.
The toothbrush 10 when used in correctional facilities may lessen the risk to inmates and correctional officers from an inmate using the toothbrush 10 or modifying it as a slashing weapon device. Inmates can fashion such a weapon from a conventional hard plastic toothbrush by cutting a notch in the head or bottom of the handle to insert a razor blade, and either melt the material around the razor blade (or glass or similar sharp material) to hold the sharp object in place. After the melted area cools, such a device becomes a dangerous weapon for the use described. The embodiment of the invention may substantially lessen or eliminate the fashioning of such a device, because the material may not have the strength and rigidity of a conventional stiff handled toothbrush.
The toothbrush 10 may be constructed of a clear material, in part or all. The correctional market desires products that are either constructed of clear material to lessen the possibility of contraband being hidden. For the retail or pet markets, solid colored material may be employed.
Many conventional toothbrushes are designed with a lengthy handle, usually with some ergonomic design, but usually with an overall design to condition the user to grasp the handle with the entire hand and bring the entire stiff handled device to bear force and pressure on the teeth and gums. Such operation may cause pain and excessive wear and abrasion to teeth and gums.
The disclosed embodiment invention eliminates or lessens much of those negative characteristics. The user of the flexible handled toothbrush 10 can use much less force and pressure on teeth and gums with a small amount of pressure using the digit such as the thumb or index finger, to guide the head portion 14. Such construction tends to eliminate the use of the entire hand to manipulate a long, stiff conventional handle that is designed to be used with the entire hand and requiring ergonomic design to lessen the negative features of having to grasp with the entire hand a handle and twisting the wrist. A conventional long handled toothbrush requires twisting or manipulation of the hand and wrist. Whereas, the toothbrush 10 uses more manipulation of the digits and less wrist action to place the flexible head portion 14 onto the teeth to be cleaned.
The elongated body 12 may have added ridges positioned further up the inside of the handle, about an inch from the thumb area to prevent possible slippage in case the user places their thumb outside the intended area.
The different materials to construct the handle will also have some features to lessen slippage when the device is wet. Conventional toothbrushes use similar materials, such as the tactile feel of rubber.
There are areas left for product identification on the underside of the toothbrush 10 as well as the top area of the head 14, for incorporating into the mold or tooling for molding indicia (not shown) thereon.
Although the toothbrush 10 is currently preferred to accommodate the prison environment, the pet market could use a larger size body 12 to provide a longer handle. A possible application could also include the retail market and the travel kit market (space requirements for travel kits necessitates downsized articles—i.e., a short handle toothbrush) or a device with a handle extension.
The head portion 14 may be a separate part and molded to the shaft during the manufacturing process. The bristles (number of cavities, and tufts or strands per cavity) should be similar to any conventional toothbrush. The head portion may vary in size, and may be sized to the mouth of an average user. Also, there may be different angles for the bristles 15. The bristles 15 may be inserted after the material of the body 12 partially or completely cools.
There may be different methods being used to insert the bristles. It should be noted that only a portion of the body 12 may be flexible or otherwise deformable.
A variety of material hardness of the body 12 may be employed to adjust the flexibility thereof to adjust the softness portion 14 to limit twisting thereof relative to the handle portion on 16.
Various modifications and changes may be made with respect to the foregoing detailed description certain embodiments of the invention as will become apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the present invention.