This invention is particularly suitable for veterinary medicine and the allied health sciences. In these fields some of the animals that are worked on may be dangerous and bite the caregiver. Often the health of the animal needs to be assessed and assessment requires access to the mouth. The oral cavity is a very good indicator of an animal's health. Many diseases directly involving the oral cavity or the internal organs can be accessed through examination of the mouth and teeth. Access to the mouth is important in emergency situations to evaluate shock and circulatory parameters as well as hepatic injury or renal disturbances. However, until now the need for protection would mean that access to the mouth would be denied. Caregivers have had to trade-off access to the oral cavity in order to gain protection from dangerous or frightened animals. A muzzle was needed that would provide a window that would give the health provider a means to visualize the oral cavity and gather the important information it can provide. The inventor, himself was prevented in many situations from being allowed access to the mouth during animal examinations and after years of frustration decided to take the time to design a muzzle to help remedy the situation and this obvious handicap.
The Invention utilizes a muzzle made of various substances from leather to man-made synthetic fabrics. The fabric material, no matter what its form, will allow to it to conform over the animal's face and to have strength enough to keep the animal's jaw from opening and biting or harming the caregiver. This invention has taken into account the protection factor that muzzles have provided but in addition has added the ability to examine the mouth through a window in the muzzle. The muzzle is therefore more complicated than others heretofore developed and patented because it includes additional substance such as a window flap or sliding portion of a muzzle. For example the additional substance and nature of the invention includes the presence of a window on parts of the muzzle that when placed over each other allows the oral cavity to come into view. This window requires removal of some of the fabric normally found on other muzzles. With the addition of a strengthening strip of fabric centrally located in the window, security of the muzzle will continue. Security is also retained because the window or windows not being used are closed down by various hardware and/or ties placed on the sides or above said window. The invention also includes a form that utilizes a flap on both sides of the muzzle that remains static but is covered by the flap by means of hardware not normally found on muzzles. The substance of the hardware includes Velcro®, turn buttons, grommets, zippers, sockets, studs, washers, rivets and laces and any other binding type of hardware not specifically mentioned. Its form in part has been described by several patents (see references above). This muzzle exceeds all previously patented muzzles in its ability to afford protection from the biting or crushing teeth while at the same time optimizing the ability of a caregiver to examine the oral cavity.