Tick Removing Devices and Methods
20210360910 · 2021-11-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02A50/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
Aspects of the disclosure relate to a tick remover device. The device may be configured to remove ticks from the skin or hair of humans. The device may be disposable. The device may include fabric or cloth, which may be coated and/or infused with an adhesive material, such as one or more resin materials. The adhesive material may have an adhesive strength sufficient to adhere any ticks present on the skin, but an adhesive strength low enough to allow passing the device over an area of skin without discomfort for the user/subject. Some aspects relate to methods of tick removal, including use of an adhesive cloth material rubbed over an area of skin to adhere and remove any ticks, including nymph ticks.
Claims
1. A tick remover device comprising: a fabric and one or more additives, and wherein the one or more additives comprise an adhesive material.
2. The device of claim 1, further comprising a container enclosing the device.
3. The device of claim 2, wherein the container is an airtight plastic bag.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein the fabric comprises cheese cloth material.
5. The device of claim 1, wherein the fabric comprises cotton material, synthetic material, or both.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein the adhesive material comprises one or more resins, waxes, gums, elastomers, hydrogels, or a combination thereof The device of claim 6, wherein the adhesive material is non-synthetic.
8. The device of claim 6, wherein the adhesive material comprises one or more petroleum- based materials.
9. The device of claim 1, wherein the adhesive material has an adhesive strength sufficient to adhere to any tick that is placed into contact with an area of the fabric containing the adhesive material.
10. The device of claim 9, wherein the adhesive strength is sufficient to adhere to nymph ticks.
11. The device of claim 1, wherein the adhesive material has an adhesive strength low enough that an area of the fabric containing the adhesive material is capable of being drawn across a subject's skin, hair, or skin and hair, without strongly adhering to the subject.
12. The device of claim 1, wherein the adhesive material comprises beeswax.
13. A method of removing ticks from the skin or hair of humans, the method comprising drawing an adhesive fabric material across the skin of a subject, or hair of a subject, or both.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein the adhesive fabric material comprises a fabric and one or more additives, wherein the one or more additives are coated on at least a portion of the fabric, infused into at least a portion of the fabric, or both, and wherein the one or more additives comprise an adhesive material.
15. The method of claim 13, wherein the adhesive fabric material attaches to any ticks on skin of a subject, hair of a subject, or both, by adhesion.
16. The method of claim 13, wherein multiple ticks are removed simultaneously.
17. The method of claim 13, wherein multiple ticks are removed in one minute or less.
18. The method of claim 13, wherein ticks that are invisible to the naked eye are removed.
19. The method of claim 13, further comprising disposing any ticks removed from the subject by disposing of the adhesive fabric material.
20. The method of claim 13, further comprising removing the fabric material from an airtight container prior to drawing the material.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0009] The present disclosure is illustrated by way of example and not limited in the accompanying figures in which like reference numerals indicate similar elements and in which:
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0015] In some aspects of the invention, a tick removing device 110 is disclosed, as shown in
[0016] The fabric may include one or more additives. The additives may be coated on at least a portion of the fabric, infused into at least a portion of the fabric, or both. In some examples, all of the fabric contains one or more additives. The one or more additives may include an adhesive material. The adhesive material may be, include, and/or be a derivative of an elastomer, hydrogel, wax, and/or resin material, or a combination thereof. The adhesive material(s) may include and/or consistent of natural substantives, synthetic substances, or a combination thereof, although in some examples the adhesive material(s) and/or additive(s) are all natural materials. Specific examples include but are not limited to silicones, vinyl alcohol compounds such as vinyl alcohol hydrogels, natural waxes such as beeswax, synthetic waxes, hydrocarbon waxes such as polyethylene waxes and/or hydrocarbon based waxes that have been functionalized through the addition of a functional group such as an ether or halogen group, and/or wax esters, gums such as plant gums (e.g. acacia gum), starches, glues, and plant resins such as pine resins, oleoresins, gum resins, oils such as plant oils, petroleum based compounds, and/or combinations thereof. The one or more additives may also include one or more insecticides, fragrances, oils, and combinations thereof. For example, in some embodiments, a natural oil is added, such as eucalyptus oil, that may provide insect repellant and/or deterrent characteristics. In some embodiments, other synthetic insecticides may be used, such as DEET.
[0017] The fabric, e.g., cheese cloth, may be infused with resin and/or coated with a resin material, and/or a wax material, and/or a combination thereof. The adhesive material(s) may provide a lightly adhesive quality to the fabric. In some examples, the adhesive materials and (if present) any other additives, may provide an adhesion between the fabric and a user's skin and/or hair when the fabric is passed over the skin and/or hair or otherwise placed into contact with the hair. In some examples, the adhesive material(s) provides an adhesive strength between the fabric and a user (e.g. the user's skin and/or hair, such as when the fabric is placed into contact with the user's leg) where the lap shear strength (i.e. the strength corresponding to the force needed to draw the fabric across the skin, as when, for example, a user could do when placing the fabric in contact with the skin, and then moving the fabric laterally across to an adjacent area of their leg) is about 5 MPA or less, about 4 MPa or less, about 3 MPa of less, about 2 MPa or less, about 1.75 MPa or less, about 1.5 MPa or less, about 1.25 MPa or less, about 1 MPa or less, about 0.9 MPa or less, about 0.8 MPa or less, about 0.7 MPa or less, about 0.6 MPa or less, or about 0.5 MPa or less. In some examples, the adhesive material(s) provides an adhesive strength between the fabric and a user where the lap shear is about 0-1 MPa, about 0.5-1.5 Mpa, about 0.5-2 MPa, about 0.75-1.25 MPa, about 0.5-1.0 MPa, about 0-2 MPa, about 0-0.75 MPa, or about 0-3 MPa. In some examples, the adhesive material(s) provides an adhesive strength between the fabric and a user where the fabric/skin lap shear is about 3 MPa or more, about 2 MPa or more, about 1.75 MPa or more, about 1.5 MPa or more, about 1.25 MPa or more, about 1 MPa or more, about 0.9 MPa or more, about 0.8 MPa or more, about 0.7 MPa or more, about 0.6 MPa or more, or about 0.5 MPa or more. The fabric/skin lap shear values provided here are determined using a modified version of ASTM F2255-05(2015), Standard Test Method for Strength Properties of Tissue Adhesives in Lap-Shear by Tension Loading, ASTM International, West Conshohocken, Pa., 2015, www.astm.org, where the adhesive is placed between a skin sample and a fabric sample (rather than two skin samples). In some examples, the adhesive material(s) provides an adhesive strength where the standard lap shear is any of the values discussed above (or others) where the standard lap shear strength is determined via a standard version of ASTM F2255-05(2015), Standard Test Method for Strength Properties of Tissue Adhesives in Lap-Shear by Tension Loading, ASTM international, West Conshohocken, Pa., 2015, www.astm.org.
[0018] In some examples, although the fabric (e.g. towelette) is somewhat sticky and has an adhesive quality, it can still be easily drawn across the skin or hair by selection of adhesive material(s) (and, if they would influence adhesive strength, any other additives) for the fabric type. At the same time, there is still sufficient adhesion such that any ticks, including microscopic nymph ticks invisible to the naked eye, may be removed. The fabric may be rectangular, square, circular, elliptical, and/or any other geometric or non-geometric shape.
[0019] In some examples, the fabric, e.g. towelette, is supplied in a container 100, as shown in
[0020] In some aspects, methods of tick removal are disclosed, as shown in
[0021] This adhesive bond may ensure that any tick or insect seen or unseen on the skin becomes bonded or attached to the cloth and removed from the surface of the skin. Humans are often infected through bites of immature ticks called nymphs. Nymphs are tiny (e.g, less than 2 mm) and difficult to see. Thus, visual inspection alone may be insufficient, but relatively prompt use of the methods/device may eliminate all ticks easily. While ticks may be removed after any time period, removing ticks before they bite the subject facilitates earlier removal.
[0022] The user may wipe down the surface of a body part, such as at a position 310 or a position 410, the body part may include their legs, arms, and/or another body part after outdoor activities and then dispose of the towelette. Ticks and other microscopic insects attached to the towelette will remain attached to it and immobilized, eventually perishing from lack of nutrition and the inability to move. As shown in
[0023] Additional specific examples of the disclosure include the following: a tick remover (e.g., the tick removing device 110) contained in an airtight plastic bag (e.g., the container 100) for convenient deployment on the skin and hair of humans; a tick remover employing beached or unbleached cheese cloth; a tick remover employing cheese cloth made from either cotton or synthetic thread; a tick remover employing cheese cloth of any grade such as but not limited to #10, #20, #40, #50, #60, #80 or #90 grades; a tick remover employing any grade of cheese cloth infused with resin or light adhesive of any type—to include petroleum based and non-petroleum based resins, and/or other forms of adhesives; a tick remover which is drawn across the skin or hair manually by the hand, e.g., a motion 320, a motion 420; a tick remover that attaches itself to the tick by the process of adhesion; a tick remover which can adhere to multiple ticks simultaneously; a tick remover that can remove ticks that are invisible to the naked eye (e.g., microscopic); a tick remover that can adhere to both visible and invisible ticks simultaneously such that multiple ticks can be removed in a short period of time (e.g., less than a minute, under thirty seconds, etc.); a tick remover which adheres to any tick or ticks that it comes into contact with and allows the user to remove said tick or ticks from the surface of the body or hair; and a tick remover that allows the user to permanently dispose of any tick removed from the body or hair by disposing of the tick remover itself.
[0024] Still other examples of the disclosure include, but are not limited to, the content of the following claims.