The invention relates to a trunk bandage or trunk orthosis, comprising two connecting portions which are brought together in the stomach or chest region and, to put on the trunk bandage or trunk orthosis, should be made to overlap one another and be connected to one another by way of connecting means, in particular a hook-and-loop fastener, at least one connecting portion being designed as a sheet-like formation.
Such trunk bandages or trunk orthoses, for example in the form of lumbar bandages or lumbar orthoses or stabilizing orthoses for the lumbar spine, are used for the treatment of problems in the back region. The patient often feels pain in the back, which he/she attempts to counter by adopting an appropriate posture of the upper body, which is tilted forward or slightly to the side, which in turn leads to further muscle strains and further pain. This can be counteracted by putting on a trunk bandage or trunk orthosis of the type described. In the case of a lumbar bandage, such a trunk bandage or trunk orthosis comprises, for example, a wide, extensive elastic portion, which generally has its greatest width in the back region; widths of 20 cm and more are quite usual. Provided at the two ends of the elastic portion are connecting portions, which are placed one over the other in front of the stomach and connected, for example by way of hook-and-loop fasteners, so that the lumbar bandage can be stretched around the body. The lumbar bandage stabilizes the back and brings about a “lordosis correction”, i.e., as a result of the compression or support caused by the bandage, the pelvis is pushed forward and the spinal column is straightened. Other bandages or orthoses covered by the invention possibly have other aids or contrivances of an elastic or inelastic nature in the back region, all of which however have in common the described connecting means at the front, which may for example also be provided on elastic or inelastic belt portions to be brought in front of the stomach or the chest.
Usually, one of the connecting portions, but mostly both, is/are designed as a sheet-like formation. They directly adjoin the two ends of the elastic portion, which at the ends still has a width of generally 10 cm and more, To allow tensioning around the body, the connecting portions assume the same width, are therefore at least as wide, as the ends of the elastic portion, sometimes are even somewhat wider. The same applies correspondingly in the case of an elastic or inelastic belt or bands on which the connecting portions are arranged. Mostly the two areas, and possibly forms, of the connecting portions are the same, so that they can be placed congruently one over the other. On the connecting portions, the upper and lower ends are often even drawn up or down somewhat, i.e. the width of the connecting portions increases somewhat—with respect to the initial width at the transition to the elastic portion or the belts or bands—and only decreases again toward the end of the connecting portion, in order to achieve overlapping over as large an area as possible.
Sometimes it may happen, in particular when forming widened edge regions, that they press unpleasantly against the stomach during sitting, as a result of the bulging contour of the stomach. This is because the connecting portions have a certain basic stiffness, therefore are to a certain extent flexible, but not elastic, since they are of course intended to produce the firm connection that brings about the therapeutically relevant tensioning in t he elastic region.
The invention consequently addresses the problem of providing a trunk bandage or trunk orthosis that has improved wearing comfort.
To solve this problem, according to the invention it is provided in the case of a trunk bandage or trunk orthosis of the type mentioned at the beginning that, at the upper or lower end—with respect to the wearing position—, on the connecting portion designed as a sheet-like formation there is formed by way of at least one bending line an edge region which can bend away along this bending line in relation to the remaining region of the connecting portion.
In the case of the trunk bandage or trunk orthosis according to the invention, at the upper or lower end, depending on where a potential problem zone is situated, the respective edge region can bend away by way of a defined bending line relatively easily with respect to the remaining region of the connecting portion.
This means that such an edge region can bulge relatively easily during sitting, therefore can bend and thus adapt itself very well to the contour of the stomach, which inevitably changes during sitting. It therefore no longer happens that the edge region stands up on the stomach as a result of its certain stiffness, but rather a simple adaptation, offering pleasant wearing comfort, is possible by “bulging” or “bending away” of the edge region.
For this purpose, the edge region is joined onto the connecting portion in such a way as to allow facilitated bending or pivoting by way of a bending line. According to a development of the invention, this bending line may be realized by way of a weakening of the material, which may also be designed to be relatively small in comparison with the remaining diameter of the material, that is to say thickness of the connecting portion. However, other forms of a bending line are conceivable. The term “bending line” means in this context a relatively sharp line, but may also define an elongate region several millimeters wide, which is likewise understood as a “bending line” in the context according to the invention. As described, stiffening inserts are often incorporated in the enclosing textile material, whether it is a knitted fabric or a terry towelling material, in the connecting portion or, if there are two, both connecting portions. The bending line can then be realized in a simple way, for example by no such stiffening material being incorporated in the region of the bending line, or by this material being made somewhat thinner in this region and the like. Various configurations are conceivable, as long as such an edge region that allows easier bending or bulging can be formed by the connecting portion being designed correspondingly.
With preference, a bending line is respectively provided both at the upper end and at the lower end of the connecting portion, so that an edge region that can bend away is respectively formed both at the upper end and at the lower end. This allows very good adaptation to the shape of the stomach, both in the region of the upper stomach and in the region of the lower stomach, which additionally improves the wearing comfort.
In a development of the invention, both connecting portions may be designed as sheet-like formations, of substantially the same size—and mostly also similar in terms of form—, an edge region that can bend away being respectively formed at the same and on both. If, therefore, both connecting portions are designed as more extensive sheet-like formations, such an edge region that can bend away is, for example, respectively located on each sheet-like formation, at the lower end or at the upper end or at both ends, in each case defined by way of a bending line. This has the effect that ultimately the edge regions of both connecting portions, which in the wearing position are arranged congruently over one another, have sufficient flexibility, and can bend away together and can thus adapt themselves to the contour of the stomach. With preference, corresponding edge regions are defined both at the upper end and at the lower end.
Such a bending line expediently extends substantially over the entire length of a connecting portion, in order to ensure that the edge region can bend away over as large an area as possible, or over the entire length, of the connecting portion, which is significantly stiffer in comparison with the adjoining elastic or inelastic portions or belts. The length of the respective bending line ultimately depends on the form or geometry of the respective connecting portion, and should be chosen correspondingly.
Further advantages, features and details of the invention emerge from the exemplary embodiment described below and from the drawings, in which:
Attached, for example adhesively attached, to the two ends 4, 5 of the elastic portion in band form are two extensive connecting portions 6, 7, which can be achieved using suitable adhesive threads and the like, which when heated achieve a firm adhesive bond between the adjacent fabrics. As
By way of appropriate bending lines 10, 11 and 12, 13, the corresponding edge portions 8, 9, 14, 15 are then defined on the connecting portions 6, 7, that is to say the sheet-like formations, as edge portions that can bend away, 8, 9 at the lower end of the connecting portion and 14, 15 at the upper end of the connecting portion. This means that these edge portions 8, 9, 14, 15 can bend away relatively easily with respect to the remaining regions of the connecting portion 16, 17 along or around this bending line 10, 11, 12, 13. This allows a simple adaptation of the form of the edge regions of the connecting portions 6, 7 to the shape of the wearer's stomach, which will be discussed in more detail below.
To put on the lumbar bandage 1, it is placed behind the wearer's back and brought to the front. The connecting portion 7 is placed on the side of the stomach, after which the connecting portion 6 is placed over the connecting portion 7 and the two are firmly connected to one another by way of suitable connecting means 18, 19, here for example a hook-and-loop fastener. The connection must be firm in order to maintain the desired tensioning that is produced by pulling the elastic portion 2 into the wearing position and is intended to act on the body.
Consequently, in the wearing position, the two connecting portions 6, 7 lie one over the other, as
To stiffen the respective connecting portions 6, 7, incorporated in each case between the respective textile layers 20, 21 and 22, 23 is a stiffening layer 26, 27 in panel form, for example of a rubber or plastics material, which although it has a certain flexibility is not elastic. To form the bending lines 10, 11, 12, 13, on these layers 26, 27 there is then formed in each case a weakening of the material 28, 29, 30, 31, i.e. the thickness of the layers 26, 27 in these regions defining the bending lines is reduced, as can be clearly seen in the sectional representation according to
The form and alignment of the connecting portions 6, 7 that are shown in
Even though the exemplary embodiment described shows two extensive connecting portions with respective edge regions that can bend away 8, 9 and 14, 15, it is of course also conceivable, for example, to design only the two lower edge portions 8, 9 on the two connecting portions 6, 7 such that they can bend away, or only the two upper edge portions 14, 15. Furthermore, it is conceivable to make only one of the connecting portions 6, 7 so extensive and provide one or both edge portions that can bend away, while the other connecting portion is much narrower, no that therefore its width, seen vertically, is much less than that of the other connecting portion and, as a result of this, it does not have to have an edge region that can bend away.
In the case of bandages or orthoses of a different structure, the connecting portions may also be provided on elastic or inelastic belts or bands to be brought in front of the stomach or the chest.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2010 011 083.1 | Aug 2010 | DE | national |