SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR APPLYING A LOW FREQUENCY MAGNETIC FIELD TO BIOLOGICAL TISSUES
20210075900 · 2021-03-11
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60N2/002
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H04M1/72454
ELECTRICITY
A61N2/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
H04W4/023
ELECTRICITY
International classification
B60N2/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A system and method for applying a low strength, low frequency magnetic field therapy to biological tissues. A coil is excited with a low frequency oscillating current, e.g., 10-1000 Hz. The coil is, e.g., 5-200 turns, having a diameter of 2-20 mm, and produces a magnetic field strength of about 0.01-5 mTelsa at a distance of 1 cm from the coil, or a cover over the coil, into the tissue. The current is preferably controlled by a smartphone or other programmable device controlled by a downloadable app in accordance with a PEMF program which may be separately downloaded or updated, and may be provided through an audio jack. Alternately, a digital interface and/or wireless interface may control the current. An app on the smartphone may be used to control the frequency, amplitude/envelope modulation, waveform, duration, etc. of the oscillation. The coil may be in mineral housing with a simple filter, and TRRS-type audio jack.
Claims
1. A magnetic therapy device, comprising: an interface configured to receive an audio spectrum electrical signal; and a coil having an external diameter of between about 2 mm and 20 mm and having at least 5 turns configured to receive the audio spectrum electrical signal and a magnetic field of between 0.01 mTesla and 5 mTesla at a distance of 1 cm in response to an oscillating electrical signal at a voltage of 1 V peak-to-peak at 100 Hz.
2. The magnetic therapy device according to claim 1, further comprising a cover, surrounding the coil.
3. The magnetic therapy device according to claim 2, wherein the cover comprises a spherical surface having a diameter of about 2 cm.
4. The magnetic therapy device according to claim 1, further comprising an electrical filter having a pole between 5 Hz and 50 kHz, configured to filter the received audio spectrum signal.
5. The magnetic therapy device according to claim 4, wherein the pole is at about 3 kHz.
6. The magnetic therapy device according to claim 1, wherein the coil has an inner diameter of about 5-10 mm and an outer diameter of less than about 15 mm.
7. The magnetic therapy device according to claim 1, wherein the presented impedance is at least 30 Ohms at 100 Hz.
8. The magnetic therapy device according to claim 1, wherein the interface comprises a 3.5 mm phono jack.
9. The magnetic therapy device according to claim 1, wherein the interface comprises a Bluetooth receiver.
10. The magnetic therapy device according to claim 1, in combination with a signal generator configured to generate the audio spectrum electrical signal.
11. The magnetic therapy device according to claim 1, further comprising a cover surrounding the coil, having a battery within the cover to power a radio frequency receiver and the coil.
12. The magnetic therapy device according to claim 1, in combination with a smartphone under control of an app, wherein the audio spectrum electrical signal is received from the smartphone.
13. A magnetic therapy method, comprising: providing a cover having an interface configured to receive an audio spectrum electrical signal, and a coil configured to receive the audio spectrum electrical signal and produce an audio spectrum magnetic field of between 0.01 mTesla and 5 mTesla at a distance of 1 cm in response to an oscillating electrical signal at a voltage of 1 V peak-to-peak at 100 Hz; contacting the cover with human or animal skin and passing the magnetic field to the animal or human skin; generating the audio spectrum magnetic field having a magnetic field strength of at least 0.01 mTesla at a distance of 1 cm from the cover.
14. The method according to claim 13, wherein the coil has an external diameter of between about 2 mm and 20 mm and having at least 5 turns.
15. The method according to claim 13, further comprising: receiving a user input to the smartphone; generating the audio spectrum magnetic field based on an audio output of the smartphone comprising a first distribution of frequencies; and generating the audio spectrum magnetic field based on an audio output of the smartphone comprising a second distribution of frequencies different from the first distribution of frequencies.
16. The method according to claim 13, further comprising filtering the audio spectrum electrical signal with an electrical filter disposed within the cover.
17. The method according to claim 16, wherein the electrical filter comprises a circuit board having at least one resistor and at least one capacitor.
18. The method according to claim 13, further moving the cover with respect to skin during emission of the audio spectrum magnetic field.
19. A electromagnetic field therapy device, comprising: a smartphone configured to generate an audio spectrum signal under control of an app; a coil, having at least 5 turns, and an inner diameter of between about 4-15 mm and being configured to emit an oscillating magnetic field corresponding to the audio spectrum signal; a cover, having an outer surface configured for contact with human or animal skin, which does perturb the oscillating magnetic field; and a circuit within the cover, configured to electrically filter the audio spectrum signal, pulsed electromagnetic field therapy device being configured to generate the oscillating magnetic field having a magnetic field strength between about 10 Tesla and 5 mTesla at a distance of 1 cm from the cover.
20. The magnetic field therapy device according to claim 19, further comprising an electrical filter comprising a resistor and a capacitor within the cover, and an interface between the smartphone and the cover selected from the group consisting of an analog audio jack and a Bluetooth interface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0312]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0316] A preferred embodiment of the technology provides a small device that can be plugged into a standard headphone jack socket on any smartphone (Android or iPhone) and used with a downloaded software app.
[0317] A jackplug holder may also be provided so the device can be worn as a necklace when not in use. A keyring embodiment may also be provided.
[0318] The schematic is simple, consisting of 4 components, as shown in
[0319] The resistor and capacitor can be housed inside the bobbin to reduce total length of device.
[0320] The excitation through the headphone jack may be e.g., a 100 Hz square wave.
[0321] According to one theory, all frequencies used can be considered as musical tone frequencies when the all tones are tuned to the keynote 453.3 Hzwhich is an important proton resonance. When more than one frequency is concurrently used, a musical chord may be generated. It is noted that it is unlikely that tissues respond to musical theory. However, the PEMF can excite afferent nerves and be communicated to the brain, which can then respond centrally or through efferent pathways.
[0322] The frequencies may have a symphonic quality, and as such need not be simple square waves, and rather may be arbitrary waveforms with dynamically changing frequencies.
[0323] The fundamental frequencies, in fact, may extend to 10 kHz, and perhaps beyond.
[0324]
[0325] The device may be conveniently provided with a necklace-holder, which has a dummy TRRS socket to retain the device when not in use. The necklace provides a convenient way to carry and transport the device. A corresponding holder may be formed as a keyring, or the like.
[0326]
[0327] a downloadable smartphone app according to the present technology may be provided, having various interface screens. In the first screen, a splash screen may be provided. Typically, during PEMF therapy, it is desired to provide a relaxing environment, and the screens should be designed with muted colors, and avoidance of distractions. In the second screen, a set of different programs may be provided, which generate different output excitation signal patterns, such as pain relief, muscle tension, and relaxation. The interface may also provide a user history option and a setup option. The pain relief screen is exemplary, and may include relevant user-identification information (name, birthdate, gender), body location to be treated, an intensity control slider, a PEMF therapy duration input, and a start screen button. This screen input may be used to represent a pre-treatment (subjective) evaluation of the patient condition.
[0328] During therapy, soothing patterns which optionally correspond to the treatment protocol may be shown on the screen, and may be animated accordingly.
[0329] A personalized user screen may show a summary of a treatment session, and provide a control button to stop the therapy. The app may also sense when the device is removed from the headphone jack, and preferably immediately cease generation of the excitation signal to avoid driving the internal phone speaker with the square wave pulses. The screen may provide an input for the patient to provide a post-treatment (subjective) evaluation, which can be used to track the therapy.
[0330] The app can also receive input from the user, post treatment, to provide subjective response factors. In some cases, objective data may be available. For example, where a vascular response to the therapy occurs, skin color, temperature, edema measurements, etc., may be acquired either automatically or manually, and input into the system. These inputs, wither on an individual basis or on a population basis, may be used to tailor the therapy for the individual, for example by changing pulse frequency and/or duty cycle, pulse amplitude, therapy duration, or various patterns of excitation pulses. In some cases, the therapy may be responsive to the environment, for example, ambient temperature or illumination, and the smartphone can detect these parameters.
[0331] It is believed that various forms of musical phrasing, in particular styles of classical music, are particularly appropriate for PEMF. Therefore, the excitation parameters may model classic works, such as patterns and amplitudes of excitation pulses, combinations of excitation parameters (similar to musical chords), etc. As discussed above, it is unclear that the peripheral tissues are capable of particularly responding to these signals, but rather that communications from the periphery to the central nervous system are involved.