Wax filled pads

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6412194
  • Patent Number
    6,412,194
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, November 4, 1999
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, July 2, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
A pad for supporting a portion of the human body is made of two substantially non-stretchable or non-elastic layers that are joined together along a peripheral edge and then are joined together in local regions to form individual capsules in the pad. The layers are “quilted” in the areas defined by the capsules to control where and how much the pad can bulge. The pad is filled with a wax material that is plastic but does not flow readily. By repeated applications of loads the wax will flow or migrate slowly to change the configuration of the wax to conform to and support the surface contacting the pad.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to a pad construction that is used for padding the human body, such as an insole pad, filled with a material, preferably a wax for conforming slowly to the foot or other body part of a user. The filling is in an envelope which has design features which limit bulging and prevent most peristaltically induced migration of the wax filling. The wax filling moves slowly under weight-bearing forces to form into rather firm concave support surfaces under bony prominences of weight-support areas of the body such as the plantar surfaces of the feet.




In the prior art, a wide range of different types of padded insoles have been used, and the use of various fillings has also been discussed. Insoles have been used which are essentially bladders, having upper and lower layers that are sealed along their edges, and these have been filled with materials such as water, air, and even some that have gum-like elasticity at normal in-door temperatures.




Many of these pads show compartments formed between the layers, so that the materials will flow between compartments as loads change.




It has been observed that old well-worn shoes are preferred by many, in particular Geriatric patients because compaction and wear under the high pressure, bony areas of the foot cause an old shoe to “wear in” to a comfortable support contour. However, old shoes do eventually become unserviceable and must be replaced with new ones. There are physiologic reasons why people need better-fitting shoes as they age. Aging muscles will atrophy, and there is a loss of bone mass. These physical changes rob the body of some of its ability to control and absorb shock by deceleration before impact (heel strike) during gait, and such physical changes can often develop into osteoporosis. Loss of flexibility of the joints also affects the body's ability to adapt to changes in gait cycles or plantar loading. Add the loss of plantar fat pads (located under bony, load bearing prominences of the foot to act as biological shock absorbers), as part of the natural aging process, and the body loses yet another of its defenses against excessive loading on the plantar surface of the foot. All of these changes, combined with a refusal to slow down and accept the coming of age by appropriately adapting lifestyles, can lead to fatigue damage (e.g. strains, bruises, tears of tendons and ligaments, stress fractures, and even the development of worsening of an arthritic condition).




People with one or more of the foot problems just described will find it difficult to tolerate new pairs of prior art shoes, claiming the new shoes are not as comfortable as the old shoes. New shoes typically are uncomfortable for these people until many months of wear have generated concave support contours under bony prominences of the foot. Thus, there is a need for an insole that will provide the custom contoured footbed of the old shoes, after a minimal number of gait cycles, while being worn in the new shoe. By providing this quick footbed break-in for the shoe, comfort can be had with new shoes that provide good support from the last, good ground contact with the new outsole, with the contoured footbed surface from the insole molded or formed to fit the dynamic contours of the owners' feet.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to a pad for supporting a portion of a human body. The pad has an envelope formed by two overlying layers of strong, high tensile elastic modulus material. The layers of material are sealed along the edges to form a sealed interior compartment. To control peristaltically induced migration of filling material, the pads are preferably further joined at spaced locations, or compartmentalized to form sealed capsules by seams joining the layers within the perimeter of the pad. To control the degree/thickness of bulging within each of the inner sealed capsules, the envelope material layers may be joined in various configurations within the perimeter of those envelopes. The layers forming the envelope can be quilted, or joined in spots or with short pier like seams or darts, which means small area portions of the layers are fused or adhered together in a particular selected pattern to control envelope volume and limit movement of the filling material into the bulged areas as wax is squeezed out of the higher pressure areas under bony prominences. Uncontrolled bulging would allow the concave support surface to have an excessively large, central area where all the filler is pushed out. Such a contour would not spread support loadings as well. Also, it is important to limit envelope thickness for reasons of comfort.




The layers forming the pad envelope should be of a material with a tensile modulus high enough so they stretch very little under the loads imposed by this application. This is necessary so that control of the bulging, thickness and material flow is possible. Any bulging should not be the result of substantial stretching of the pad envelope material.




The filling material is preferably a wax material that does not flow immediately upon first loading, but will shift slowly under repeated applications of weight in a particular area. The slow movement or migration of the wax occurs particularly when the wax is near the temperature of human bodies and under repeated dynamic loads typical during gait. More rapid conforming can be achieved if the wax is preheated. The wax is chosen so that it will be plastic and will flow gradually with many load repetitions but yet be hard or firm and shape retaining when it reaches a location where the supported load, that is, the pressure on an area of the wax, is fairly uniform, and the pad envelope construction is preventing further shifting. The wax, while plastic, does not quickly flow under changes of pressure.




The pad compartments or capsules are chosen to keep the filling in particular areas of the pad and contain and control excessive peristaltic movement of the filling. The slow plastic flow or movement can be controlled by the “quilting” or short “pier” seams that are disclosed. Barrier seams are used to form capsules sized to keep the wax filling material from being excessively “pumped” by peristaltic type action under the foot as forceful contact proceeds usually posterior to anterior and lateral to medial during the typical weight bearing cycle of gait, and to maintain a local degree of filling that will conform to the supported surface. Capsule size and design is of particular importance to distribute pressures under irregular surfaces with bony prominences, such as the metatarsal phalangeal (MTP) joint region of a foot.




Further, pad regions, such as the metatarsal-phalangeal (MTP) joint area of an insole have a greater number of compartments or capsules and quilting junctions, so that a support thickness of the wax material in high pressure or bony areas is maintained.




The spacing of the quilting junctions between the top and bottom layers in particular capsules can be modified to regulate the maximum bulge thickness and volume of a compartment or capsule that is closed off by seams between the top and bottom pad layers.




The upper surface of the pad is preferably a low friction material, such as a Teflon® coated fabric in bony high pressure areas.




The filling material is selected so that the material will redistribute to form a cradle-like support surface only upon repeated applications of loads, such as when walking, to achieve a custom contour under the foot. A firm/bony convexity of the foot will cause a concavity in the filling material, such as wax, so that the foot bears weight on an increased area. However, again, the compartment or capsule has to be sized for volume control, so that there is material supporting the convexity such as a bony protuberance, by filling around it, to better spread the loads on the skin across the supported area.




The present construction deals with control of bulging of the wax material, so that the forming is such that excessive build-up of material in local areas, and an absence of material in other areas that need support is prevented. The spaced quilting or junctions within the compartments or capsules that are formed by seams serve a combination of functions. They prevent excessive amounts of filler material from being squeezed into low pressure areas from under the higher pressure bony areas. Excessive expulsion of filler material from those areas would leave excessively large “bottomed out” areas in the center of the cradles. That would reduce their load-spreading capability. Also excessively thick bulging in the lower pressure areas may be uncomfortable on even a barrier to the entry of the toes into the toe box of a shoe.




The filling material, which, again, is preferably a wax, has the potential to flow or redistribute only a little bit with each step. For example, say approximately 50 to 200 steps on an insole will cause the wax, acting like a truly plastic material to adequately redistribute from a uniform thickness to a multiplicity of little hills, hollows, ridges and valleys. As the pressure is equalized, because the filler material is constrained within the compartment or capsule, the material will cease to flow and will provide a firm cradle of broader support under bony areas.




Since the pad envelope material is not easily stretched, the volume of a bulged area of the capsule is fixed. A given capsule is likely to have one or more areas from which much of the wax has been expelled. The wax is pushed out because those areas lie under bony locations of the foot which tend to generate high dynamic pressures during gait. The wax thus pushed out of those areas migrates to the perimeter of those bony prominences causing the capsule to bulge. However, the high tensile modulus of the envelope material in combination with the envelope quilting or junctions limits such flow.




The pressure supporting the body portion on an individual compartment may be different from that provided by another compartment or capsule because the material is constrained. In other words, there is not necessarily an even pressure throughout the entire pad.




Additionally, the filling should have limited thickness, and as part of the volume control, there is a limitation of the bulges of the pad to certain regions or compartments.




While the preferred embodiment is shown as an insole, it can be used as a prosthesis pad to support bony areas of residual limbs. The bony area will move the filling material, such as wax, to spread the pressures that are encountered more evenly than foams.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a plan view of a pad having a filling material and made according to the present invention used for an insole;





FIG. 2

is a sectional view taken as on line


2





2


in

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 3

is an enlarged portion of the sectional view of

FIG. 2

;





FIG. 4

is a plan view of a modified form of the present invention showing an insole with different bulge amplitude limit constraints;





FIG. 5

is a sectional view taken as on line


5





5


in

FIG. 4

;





FIG. 6

is a plan view of a further modified insole showing a different configuration or shape of regions of control of bulge amplitude;





FIG. 7

is an enlarged sectional view taken as on line


7





7


in

FIG. 6

;





FIG. 8

is a plan view of a pad similar to

FIG. 6

with different bulge amplitude limiting seams made according to the present invention;





FIG. 9

is a plan view of an insole showing only “quilting” without compartments;





FIG. 10

is a schematic cross-sectional view illustrating a pad made according to the present invention with a substantially ideal relationship between the formation of the pad, and the volume of the wax in order to properly support bony or protuberance areas of the foot;





FIG. 11

is a cross-sectional illustration where the pad or envelope material is too easily stretched, that is a low tensile modulus of elasticity;





FIG. 12

is a sectional view illustrating conditions where the pad is not adequately filled with wax causing it to be formed into a cradle that is too wide and too loose to give broad close contact and support; and





FIG. 13

is a schematic cross-sectional view wherein the cradle is too broad because the perimeter areas will accept too much volume of wax, due to insufficient quilting to limit the volume.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS




The pads of the present invention, such as that illustrated at


10


in

FIG. 1

, are shown as insoles, but it is to be understood they can be other types of pads that will support bony areas of a human body in particular.




The pads have certain common characteristics, which include, as shown in

FIG. 2

, a base layer


12


of material, with an overlying layer


14


. The common characteristics include the base layer


12


and the overlying layer


14


are made of substantially inelastic material, that is a material having a high modulus of elasticity, but also preferably material which can be heat sealed together. A tensile modulus of elasticity of greater than 25,000 psi is preferred. It also has to be thin enough to bend, flex, or fold as the filling material, preferably a wax, flows out of some regions and crowds into others. For example, the material may be a thin (under 0.010 inch thick) polypropylene or polyethylene film or a metallocene-catalyzed plastomer. Preferably, in areas where there is a combination high contact pressure and shearing motions between the foot and insole, the film will have a PTFE coating on the surface supporting the portion of the human body, such as the foot. Also, if desired a thin layer of foam can be placed over the pad to smooth out the junction between pad capsules.




The filling material is common to all of the present forms of the invention as well, and comprises a rheolically plastic material, such as a wax, in the preferred form, that is plastic under load, but is not readily flowable. In other words, by Theologically plastic, it is meant that the wax material moves or flows very slowly in response to pressures and repeated movements against its surface. In the case of an insole, the filling material will significantly redistribute itself in a range of 50-500 gait cycles, depending on its temperature, but full formation within the range of 50 to 200 gait cycles is preferred. The wax flows slowly enough at ambient temperatures and plantar pressures so that on a step-by-step basis it is presenting a firm support surface to the bottom of the foot. Another possible approach would be to pre-warm the wax to achieved “form-in” of cradling contours in fewer steps but this is time consuming and bothersome.




An ideal wax would be one that is moldable but firm throughout the range of temperatures typically encountered under foot in a shoe. The estimated temperature range within a shoe is about 70° F. to 110° F. In tests, a micro-crystalline wax (Industrial Raw Materials Corp.—Indramic 2975) with a melting temperature of 150-160° F. and needle penetration value of 35 at 77° F. and a polyethylene wax (M. Argnesco & Co.—Cerita Wax 09321) with a penetration value of 75 at 77° F. work well.




Wax is relatively incompressible compared to compressive cushioning materials such as foams, now in common use.




The relatively non-elastic or inelastic enclosure material (modulus of elasticity greater than 25,000 psi) can have more than one layer, to prevent the individual compartments from distending or bulging too far, into low pressure areas.




The volume limiting features such as a spot or line seam or “quilting” that fastens the top and bottom layers together are used to limit bulging amplitudes. The amount of filling material in a particular compartment to achieve the desired effect will not vary so much from person to person, so a standard filling can be used, and the spot and line welds help carry the loads necessary to resist outer or peripheral seam separation as well as excessive bulging.




The pads are compartmentalized or formed into capsules to resist peristaltic pumping action on the contents in the pad. Controlling the redistribution of the wax under simple repeated surface contact pressures is important. The peristaltic pumping of the wax, for example in an insole, from lateral to medial under the “ball” (MTP joint region) of the foot can be impeded and limited by dividing the area into a multiplicity of segregated capsules perpendicularly transversing the direction of the peristaltic pump action.




A measured, predetermined volume of wax is placed in each compartment or capsule. If a capsule contains too much wax, a complete cradle will not be formed under the bony areas because all areas of the capsule are at full capacity and wax migration/redistribution is thus prevented. If a capsule is filled with an inadequate volume of wax the envelope will have an excessively large cradle area under each bony prominence (see

FIG. 12

for illustrations). There would be a large “bottomed out” region under bony prominences. An ideal wax volume-to-envelope volume ration would be that which just barely allows a bony prominence to “bottom out” (see FIG.


10


).




Pad


10


, as shown in

FIGS. 1 and 2

, has the base or lower layer


12


and the overlying or upper layer


14


joined along peripheral seams


16


, that are of sufficient width to provide an adequate strength to resist the separation or bulging forces that occur. The peripheral seams define the size and shape of the pad. In this form of the invention, the pad is divided up into a number of different individual internal compartments or capsules that define groups of capsules. The compartments or capsules are formed generally as shown in

FIG. 2

, by providing intermediate seams


18


, which is a general number for the intermediate seams within the periphery of the seam


16


.




In this form of the invention there are transverse seams


20


A,


20


B, and


20


C which are under the metatarsal phalangeal joint area of the foot, or the ball of the foot, and the transverse seams are joined by longitudinal seams


22


A and


22


B, as shown the seams make six individual compartments or capsules under the ball of the foot forming a capsule group


24


. These compartments or capsules are shown at


24


A,


24


B,


24


C,


24


D,


24


E and


24


F.




Each of the capsules


24


A-


24


F has a filling of a material, such as a suitable wax shown at


21


in

FIGS. 2

,


3


and


5


, that is of the selected volume to provide a layer of wax under the foot and between the foot and the shoe sole. The material is constrained in each of the individual capsules


24


A-


24


F, and cannot flow into the other capsules in the group. In addition, for controlling the “bulging” or volume, a series of “quilting” junctions or dots


26


are provided in each of the compartments. These “quilting” junctions join the layers


12


and


14


, as can be seen in

FIGS. 2 and 3

, and they will serve to control the movement of the wax under repeated loads.




As shown, the number of “quilting” junctions in each of the individual capsules


24


A-


24


F can be varied to provide for adequate control. The insole shown in this figure is for the left foot, and the individual size of the capsules is made to conform to the foot. The “quilting” junctions or dots


26


are thus used for bulge control within each individual capsule or compartment defined by seams such as those shown at


20


A-


20


C and


22


A and


22


B.




In the toe region of the insole, there is another capsule group


28


formed by transverse seams


20


C and


20


D, and longitudinal seams


22


B and


22


C that form six capsules or compartments


28


A,


28


B,


28


C,


28


D,


28


E and


28


F. The capsule group


28


underlies all of the toes. The capsules are kept small in order to retain control and keep the bulges small. Again, “quilting” junctions or dots


26


are used here to prevent excessive bulging up of the capsules of the pad, for example where there is little load. The seams


20


A and


20


D control movement of the filling so that the material under the metatarsal region does not merely migrate into the sulcus, which is the region between the ball of the foot and the toes or posteriorly into the arch region of the foot. Thus, control of the support provided is achieved.




Along the lateral side of the insole, there is a capsule group


30


formed by a curved longitudinal seam


22


E and a transverse seam


20


E. These seams form two capsules


30


A and


30


B. The lateral side capsules


30


A and


30


B have “quilting” junctions or dots


26


to control the bulging of the compartments or capsules under the lateral side of the foot.




The medial or arch side has a compartment


32


defined by seams


20


C and


20


F, as shown. A plurality of the “quilting” junctions


26


are in position. The loading in the instep area is less than in some of the other areas of the insole.




In

FIG. 1

, a heel capsule group


34


comprises two capsules


34


A and


34


B which are defined by the perimeter seams


16


and by seam


20


F which forms a U-shaped region


38


with little or no filling of material in between the layers of the pad to accommodate the plantar ligament attachment region of the calcaneus. The region


38


is open to the insole capsule where little pressure is present. In this U-shaped region


38


, there are a few of the quilting junctions


26


between the top and bottom layers for controlling the “bulging” of the layers. Also, in capsules


34


A and


34


B there are selected quilting junctions


26


so that the wax material in the compartment will be worked properly to provide a support for the heel of a wearer. The region


38


serves to relieve pressure on the attachment of the plantar ligament.




It can be seen that the pad


10


in

FIG. 1

is individually compartmented to a manner to form enclosed, fixed volume capsules that will permit a truly/rheologically plastic material, such as a wax, to conform to a surface contacting the upper layer of the pad. Because the pad material is not easily stretched, the bulging of the fixed volume of filling material is controlled by the compartment seams and by the quilting junctions or dots that join the upper and lower pad layers together in selected regions. An enlarged view of the quilting junction dots


26


adjacent a particular seam


20


B is shown in FIG.


3


.




Depending on the need, the


5


capsule groups may be used individually, all together, or in any other combination.




The illustrations of pads is not to scale. The pad material is much thinner than the showings in relation to the thickness of the wax layer. Thus, the drawings are illustrative, rather than to scale, for the pads shown.





FIG. 4

shows a modified form of the invention, as an insole


40


, which has a peripheral seam


42


and is made up of base and overlying layers


44


and


46


in the same manner as the previous form of the invention. The interior seams dividing out compartments or capsules are the same as in FIG.


1


and numbered alike. The layers


44


and


46


are shown in FIG.


5


. There is a capsule group


48


made up of six different compartments or capsules


48


A-


48


F under the ball of the foot, as in the first form of the invention. A group


49


of capsules


49


A-


49


F is under the toes and capsules


50


A and


50


B are on the lateral side of the foot. Capsules


52


A and


52


B are provided in the heel region. An instep or medial side capsule


54


is also provided and the plantar ligament region


56


opens to capsule


54


, as in FIG.


1


.




The seams for separating out the individual capsules are formed the same as in the first form of the invention by heat sealing, RF welding or, if desired, use of adhesives. The compartments or capsules are constrained in size and the fill material controlled in volume so that bulging is controlled. However, a plurality of very narrow pier seams or junction “darts” indicated at


60


are provided in the compartments, to join the base and overlying layers of the pad together along very narrow areas, that extend partially into the compartments or capsules, to control bulging in certain regions of each of the individual capsules. As the material filling the pad flows under repeated forces, the pad material conforms to the skin without pushing out all material in high load areas and bulging up in low load areas.





FIG. 5

illustrates these narrow regions


60


where the top layer is joined or fused to the bottom layer. These are much like the quilting “dots” and can be considered “quilting” in the context of the present invention.




The number of these narrow pier seams or “darts” can be selected as desired, and as shown they do not have to be in each and every compartment of the insole. These pier seams or darts can also be varied in length of extension and spacing.




The rest of the construction of the insole is the same as shown in

FIGS. 1

,


2


and


3


, with the seams illustrated in

FIG. 4

made by fusing or adhering the base and overlying layers together. If the seams are wide and the dots or piers are larger than desired, a thin layer of foam


59


, as shown in

FIG. 5

can be used over the upper side of the pad of the present invention. The form will tend to fill in the depressions for smoothness. The layer of foam is optional. A layer


61


(

FIG. 5

) of low friction surface material such as polytetrafluorethylene (PTFE) can also be used on the top of the foam or directly on top of the pad. The PTFE layer is used to reduce and control friction. By adding the PTFE only on selected regions of the pad, friction control is achieved.





FIG. 6

shows a further modified insole


64


, made of pad layers


62


and


63


fused together at a peripheral seam


65


. The pad


64


has a different shape and size. A metatarsal capsule group


68


is divided up as before into individual capsules


68


A-


68


F, and filled with the desired material between the base or bottom and overlying or top layers of the pad, which are arranged as shown in

FIGS. 2 and 3

. The seams, indicated generally at


67


form differently shaped peripheries of the capsules


68


A-


68


F, and will provide different support regions.




The toe capsule group


70


is divided up into six capsules


70


A-


70


F and have a wax material filling the capsules. The lateral side capsules


72


A and


72


B, the heel capsules


74


A and


74


B and the instep capsule


76


, including region


78


are formed as before, but with slightly differently shaped peripheries. The calcaneus or heel capsules


74


A and


74


B form a U-shape, as was shown in FIG.


4


. In this pad


64


there are a number of the quilting junctions or dots


26


provided in a fairly evenly spaced arrangement. The region


78


is provided as was shown in

FIG. 4

to permit the plantar ligament to be subjected to little, if any, load.





FIG. 7

illustrates a cross section to show the region


78


where relief of the plantar ligament is provided, and the two pad layers


62


and


63


, respectively that are joined together. The quilting junctions


26


are also illustrated in

FIG. 7

along with the peripheral or outer seam


65


of the pad.




The pad again is filled with a material indicated at


67


which is wax or other suitable material that is truly plastic, but which does not flow readily, and provides firm support after repeated applications of load.





FIG. 8

is a view of a pad similar to

FIG. 6

, and in this instance, the pad


82


is made in the same outer shape as that shown in FIG.


6


. It includes six different compartments or capsules


82


A-


82


F in the metatarsal capsule group


82


; six capsules


84


A-


84


F in the toe capsule group


84


in the toe area; lateral side compartments or capsules


86


A and


86


B, and calcaneus compartments


88


A and


88


B, as well as an instep compartment or capsule


90


. The calcaneus compartments


88


A and


88


B form a U-shape again, and they define a region


92


for accommodating the plantar ligament of a user.




The seams are all shown in darkened lines, and are made as before by fusing the overlying or top and base or bottom layers together. In this form, pier seams or darts


94


are used to control filling material migration or flow. The pad or envelope layers are made of a substantially non-elastic material as explained, that can be fused or joined together along the seams, so that individual compartments or capsules can be made. The compartments are filled with a filling of material, preferably a wax as previously explained and the compartments constrain the movement of the wax so that the foot that is using the insole is supported and the pressure within each individual compartment or capsule is substantially uniform.





FIG. 9

shows a modified form of the insole shown at


94


, which is made up of overlying or top and base or bottom layers of flexible material joined together with seams


96


along the sides that define the periphery. There are no interior seams to divide the compartment pad


97


into a plurality of capsules, but in this case, there are a number of quilting junctions or dots


100


provided to control bulging. The entire internal area is one capsule that is filled with wax material. The quilting junctions


100


are arranged in uniformally spaced longitudinal columns


102


. The transverse rows


101


of junction are offset in adjacent columns, so the junctions


100


of one column are midway between the junctions


100


of the adjacent column.




This type of a pad shown in

FIG. 9

can be used where desired. Bulging is controlled only by the junctions


100


. The internal pad compartment is filled to a desired volume with wax material, as previously shown and described. The volume of the wax filling in this insole pad shifts under repeated weight application, but the top layer cannot bulge up beyond a certain thickness, because of the quilting junctions, so that there is a control of the thickness of material. This causes the filling material to maintain a layer underneath the foot.




The placement of the seams or segregation barriers forming the individual capsules is preferred for control because as the foot proceeds from initial contact through foot flat and onto toe off during a stride does so in a sort of a rolling action. From these peristaltic type loads advancing down the length of an enclosed capsule, the contents will tend to be pumped from one end of a capsule and build-up at the other end. Such peristaltic pumping effects are minimized by installing seams transverse to the pumping direction. Those seams then form a multiplicity of segregated capsules. Particularly under the ball of the foot, in the forms of

FIGS. 1-8

and as shown in

FIG. 10

, the peristaltic flow impeded by blocking the path of wax flow with segregating seams or barriers placed to hold the wax within capsules. Those seams also work in conjunction with the quilting features to control bulge thickness. Further, the compartments or capsules are volume limited, and then the controlling features such as quilting dots or junctions, and the pier seams fasten the top and bottom layers together. “Quilting” will control the maximum wax flow in the vertical direction by limiting the available volume to be filled. This is done without interfering with the creation of a minimal thickness under high force areas. Quilting can also be used to prevent undesired bulging in sensitive low pressure areas, and allow desirable wax fill by the presence or absence of quilting patterns into low pressure areas that are able to tolerate high or low forces.




The type of wax used can vary, but a wax such as a microcrystalline wax or a “scale wax” that forms in refineries has been found to be satisfactory. The wax should soften slightly at body temperatures, so that the flowing will occur, but it is not in any sense “liquid”. The wax must have a melting point temperature which is higher than the functional temperature range of the pad.





FIGS. 10

,


11


,


12


and


13


, are schematic cross-sectional views taken under the metatarsal area of the foot, and are provided for purposes of illustration.

FIG. 10

shows a pad indicated at


120


that has an upper layer


121


, and a lower layer


122


that are joined together with quilting dots shown at


124


. The filling of wax shown at


126


is made to be approximately the right volume, and the quilting dots are appropriately spaced so that when the wax has completed migration after 50-200 walking gait cycles, a foot shown at


127


is supported on the pad, the bony areas of the foot just barely or almost “bottom out” in the center portions of the pad indicated at


128


. It must be noted that the cross section of

FIG. 10

is taken across several quilting dots


124


which are like posts, around which the wax can pass so the wax filled regions illustrated are not separate sealed capsules.




The working or movement of the foot will cause wax to flow as indicated by arrows


126


A, outwardly, and the outer capsules such as that shown at


121


A will restrain the flow of wax outwardly. The perimeter areas of the pad thus provide a reaction area for the flow or movement of the wax as the bony areas cause the upper layers of pad material to come very close to the lower layer of material corresponding to the apex of the bony prominence.





FIG. 11

is an illustration where the pad


130


, which can be constructed essentially the same as that shown in

FIG. 10

, is made of a material that stretches too much. The modulus of elasticity is too low. The quilting dots at the outer perimeter regions indicated at


132


and


133


will not retain the wax in the center of the pad because the envelope stretches between the quilting dots. The wax in the center portions


134


will be excessively squeezed or worked outwardly and there will not be enough wax to form a well shaped cradle to support the prominence of the foot


136


. The two layers of material used for forming the pad, shown at


135


and


137


, will bottom out across a wide area indicated by the double arrow


139


.





FIG. 12

shows a pad where there is not enough wax in the interior of the pad


140


between the top layer


141


forming the capsules, and the bottom layer


142


. In this form of the invention, the perimeter areas near the outer edges of the pad such as those shown at


143


and


144


are not filled completely with the wax until a wide bottomed out region is formed. The wax from the center portions


146


will be forced out by the foot


148


to the outer sides, and a wide bottomed out region indicated by the double arrow


147


will result.





FIG. 13

illustrates a situation where a pad


150


is constructed with a top layer


151


and a bottom layer


152


, but few or no quilting dots have been placed/welded into the perimeter regions


153


and


155


. They will accept too much volume of the wax and bulge up, or out as shown at


153


and


155


. If there were additional quilting dots in regions such as that shown at


156


A and


156


B, the outer capsules would not bulge up as much and the wax would be more properly contained to avoid bottoming out of the bony area of the foot


158


in the center regions indicated at


159


. The center portion also can have additional containment regions.




These

FIGS. 10-13

are for illustrative purposes, again, to show that by proper selection of the volume of the wax and having adequate “quilting” as well as adequate sets of capsules, support that is ideal such as that shown in

FIG. 10

can be achieved.




Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.



Claims
  • 1. A pad for supporting a portion of the human body which forms an irregular surface configuration, the pad comprising two layers of substantially nonstretchable material joined together around a peripheral edge to define the pad, the layers being joined together at selected locations within an area bounded by the peripheral edge to form individual enclosed capsules within the area bounded by the peripheral edge, and a filling of a non-resilient, rheologically plastic conformable wax material only in the pad which will move slowly under repeated applications of force to assume configurations of a surface contacting and loading one of the layers of the pad and which retains the configurations when force is no longer applied, the selected locations being selected to restrain bulging of the material in the pad by separating the layers of material in regions that are lightly loaded, and the seams of the capsules preventing the wax material from moving from the capsule.
  • 2. The pad of claim 1, wherein said wax material remains plastic at temperatures ranging between 70 F to 110 F.
  • 3. The pad of claim 1, wherein the pad comprises a foot pad and a plurality of transversely extending seams joining the layers of material together in toe and metatarsal regions of the pad, and at least one fore and aft extending seam between the transversely extending seams in the toe and metatarsal support region to form a plurality of enclosed capsules in both the toe and metatarsal regions to resist peristaltic pumping action on the filling material of the pad.
  • 4. The pad of claim 3 and a plurality of quilting junction regions between the layers, wherein the layers forming the pad are joined together at small area junctions.
  • 5. The pad of claim 1, wherein the selected locations include seam lines that join the layers of material to form at least one capsule separated from other portions of the area bounded by the peripheral edge.
  • 6. The pad of claim 5 and a plurality of quilting junctions between the layers of material within the at least one capsule.
  • 7. The pad of claim 5 and a plurality of short seams joining the layers of material and extending inwardly from the seam line toward center portions of the at least one capsule.
  • 8. The pad of claim 1, wherein the two layers of material forming the pad are substantially non-stretchable material and wherein the pad comprises an insole pad, and a plurality of seams between the layers of material to divide the pad into a plurality of enclosed capsules including three transversely extending seams in a metatarsal support region of the insole pad to isolate the metatarsal region from other portions of the insole pad, a plurality of longitudinal seams between the transverse seams to form a plurality of enclosed capsules in the metatarsal region, the enclosed capsules holding a predetermined volume of the wax material in the enclosed capsules in the metatarsal region to provide separate support for the metatarsal portions of a foot supported on the pad.
  • 9. An insole pad for supporting a foot comprising two layers of material joined together around a peripheral edge to define the pad, the layers being joined together at selected locations within an area bounded by the peripheral edge, including a first region adapted to underlie the metatarsal phalangeal joint of a foot, and wherein there are continuous interior seam lines joining the layers of material forming enclosed individual, fixed volume capsules within an area bounded by the peripheral edge, the seam lines including two transverse seam lines to isolate the first region from other portions of the insole and form one of the capsules, said capsules all having a fixed volume filling in each fixed volume capsule comprising a wax having a melting temperature substantially between 150 F to 160 F, and the two transverse seam lines preventing the wax from moving portions of insoles other than the region, the wax having a consistency such that it will move slowly under repeated applications of force to assume configurations of a surface contacting and loading one of the layers of the pad and which retains the configurations when force is no longer applied, the selected locations being selected to restrain bulging of the material in the pad by separating the layers of material in regions that are lightly loaded and each of the capsules adapted to underly the metatarsal phalangeal joint including a plurality of junction darts joining the two layers to control bulging as the wax moves to retain the configurations formed by repeated applications of load.
  • 10. The pad of claim 9, wherein the fixed volume of wax material in the enclosed capsules is sufficient a volume to provide separation of the two layers of material forming the insole in all capsules in insole.
  • 11. The pad of claim 9, wherein there are three transverse seam lines in the first region of the pad, the transverse seam lines having a center seam line, a forward seam line, and a rear seam line, and a plurality of longitudinally extending seam lines between the forward seam line and the center seam line, and a second plurality of longitudinally extending seam lines between the center seam line and the rearward seam line to form individual capsules, each filled with a controlled volume of the rheologically plastic material.
  • 12. An insole pad for supporting a foot of the human body comprising base and overlying layers of flexible substantially non-stretchable material joined together around a peripheral edge to define the insole pad, the insole pad comprising an enclosed compartment surrounded by the peripheral edge with a length and a width, a plurality of junction regions holding the base and overlying layers together within the area bounded by the peripheral edge to control the amount that the base and overlying layers can separate at any location when a load is applied to the pad, the junction regions defining a pair of spaced, transverse sealing lines extending across the entire width of the pad to separate a separate capsule in the metatarsal region, and one of the transverse sealing lines forming a separate capsule in a toe region of the pad, and a filling of a moldable plastic in each capsule and other portions of the compartment material that is sufficiently plastic to mold to conform to a foot surface under repeated loads in response to pressures from the foot surface on a layer of the pad.
  • 13. The pad of claim 12, wherein said paid has a plurality of transverse seams joining the base and overlying layers, and a plurality of fore and aft extending seams between the transverse seams to form individual capsules of selected size in selected regions of the pad.
  • 14. The pad of claim 13, wherein one of the selected regions comprises a heel region of the insole pad, said seams defining a U-shaped support area around the peripheral edge in the heel region of the pad, and a portion of the pad in a center of the heel region separated from the capsules adjacent the peripheral edge of the heel region, such that the capsules adjacent the peripheral edge are filled with a wax material to support a heel along the peripheral edges thereof.
  • 15. The pad of claim 14 and a layer of foam overlying the pad.
  • 16. The pad of claim 12 and low friction surface material forming at least portions of the upper surface of the pad.
  • 17. A method of custom fitting an insole comprising the steps of providing an insole pad having upper and lower layers joined around a peripheral edge defining an insole pad edge, and a plurality of enclosed separate insole capsules within the confines of the insole pad edge, filling the insole pad capsules to a desired volume of a wax material that will flow and migrate to conform to a foot surface under repeated loads on the pad occurring in 50 to 200 gait cycles of a wearer, wearing the pad between 50 to 200 gait cycles to cause the wax to move to conform to the bottom surface of a foot that is supported by the insole until migration ceases and the wax conforms to the bottom surface of a foot.
  • 18. The method of claim 17 further comprising providing junctions between the upper and lower layer or material to control separation of the layers of the insole pad within the capsules formed.
US Referenced Citations (33)
Number Name Date Kind
2645865 Town Jul 1953 A
3615972 Morehouse, Jr. et al. Oct 1971 A
3736673 Dubner Jun 1973 A
3765422 Smith Oct 1973 A
3871117 Richmond et al. Mar 1975 A
4083127 Hanson Apr 1978 A
4123855 Thedford Nov 1978 A
4211019 McCafferty Jul 1980 A
4255202 Swan, Jr. Mar 1981 A
4464850 Ebert et al. Aug 1984 A
4471538 Pomeranz et al. Sep 1984 A
4510699 Nakamura et al. Apr 1985 A
4567677 Zona Feb 1986 A
4603493 Eston Aug 1986 A
4685224 Anger Aug 1987 A
4768295 Ito Sep 1988 A
4843735 Nakanishi Jul 1989 A
4934071 Virgini Jun 1990 A
5005575 Geri Apr 1991 A
5058291 Hanson Oct 1991 A
5067255 Hutcheson Nov 1991 A
5149588 Fukushima et al. Sep 1992 A
5154682 Kellerman Oct 1992 A
5167999 Wang Dec 1992 A
5313717 Allen et al. May 1994 A
5362543 Nickerson Nov 1994 A
5392533 Gerhartl Feb 1995 A
5418037 Maeder et al. May 1995 A
5686167 Rudy Nov 1997 A
5778561 Shimoyama Jul 1998 A
5869164 Nickerson et al. Feb 1999 A
5878510 Schoesler Mar 1999 A
5933984 Carlson et al. Aug 1999 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
198 01 301 Nov 1998 DE
0 714 613 Jun 1996 EP