ANTI-CLENCHING TRAINING DEVICE
20230130056 · 2023-04-27
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B5/053
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B5/0002
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B5/7455
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B5/1107
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B5/256
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B5/002
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B5/746
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A muscle anti-clenching training device comprising a flexible device body conformable in a range of configurations upon a user’s body, and including: a skin-contact side and a top cover side; electrical contacts mounted in the flexible device body and exposed upon the skin-contact side; an adhesive upon the skin-contact side; an alert device mounted in the flexible device body; sensing circuitry electrically connected to the electrical contacts and structured to monitor an electrical property in a user’s body; and an electronic controller coupled to the sensing circuitry and structured to activate the alert device to produce an alert signal where the monitored electrical property is indicative of a muscular contraction.
Claims
1. A muscle anti-clenching training device comprising: a flexible device body conformable in a range of configurations upon a user’s body, and including a skin-contact side and a top cover side; electrical contacts mounted in the flexible device body and exposed upon the skin-contact side; an adhesive upon the skin-contact side; an alert device mounted in the flexible device body; sensing circuitry electrically connected to the electrical contacts and structured to monitor an electrical property in a user’s body; and an electronic controller coupled to the sensing circuitry and structured to activate the alert device to produce an alert signal where the monitored electrical property is indicative of an undesired muscular contraction.
2. The training device of claim 1 wherein the alert device includes a wireless alert device, and the alert signal includes a wireless alert signal.
3. The training device of claim 2 wherein the alert device includes an audio alert device and the alert signal includes a user-perceptible audio signal.
4. The training device of claim 3 wherein the alert device includes a piezoelectric transducer.
5. The training device of claim 1 wherein the flexible device body is elongate and extends between a first body end and a second body end, and the electrical contacts are distributed longitudinally along the device body.
6. The training device of claim 5 wherein the first body end includes a first elongate strip and the second body end includes a second elongate strip, and a middle section of the device body is between the first elongate strip and the second elongate strip and is enlarged laterally relative to the first elongate strip and the second elongate strip.
7. The training device of claim 6 wherein a first one of the electrical contacts is mounted in the first elongate strip, a second one of the electrical contacts is mounted in the second elongate strip, and a third one of the electrical contacts is mounted in the middle section.
8. The training device of claim 6 wherein the sensing circuitry, the alert device, and the electronic controller are all resident in the middle section.
9. The training device of claim 5 wherein a number of the electrical contacts is three.
10. The training device of claim 9 wherein the adhesive is upon the electrical contacts.
11. The training device of claim 1 wherein the flexible device body is formed at least in part by a flexible printed circuit board.
12. The training device of claim 11 wherein the flexible printed circuit board is folded to form a base layer and a second layer, and a cavity is formed between the base layer and the second layer, and the electrical contacts are attached to the base layer.
13. The training device of claim 9 wherein the alert device is mounted upon the second layer.
14. The training device of claim 13 further comprising an ON/OFF switch mounted upon the second layer.
15. The training device of claim 12 further comprising a battery electrically connected to the sensing circuitry and to the electronic controller and positioned in the cavity.
16. The training device of claim 1 wherein the monitored electrical property includes a voltage difference between skin locations on the user’s body corresponding to an undesirable behavior.
17. The training device of claim 16 wherein the sensing circuitry is further structured to monitor the electrical property in a plurality of read cycles alternating with a plurality of wait cycles.
18. The training device of claim 17 wherein the electronic controller is further structured to activate the alert device where the monitored electrical property indicates a muscular contraction in a plurality of the read cycles.
19. The training device of claim 16 wherein the device decreases in sensitivity over time to curb the undesirable behavior.
20. A method of preparing a muscle anti-clenching training device for service in training a user comprising: coupling an electronic controller to muscle contraction sensing circuitry in a flexible device body of a muscle anti-clenching training device, where the flexible device body includes a skin-contact side and a top side, and electrical contacts exposed upon the skin-contact side; coupling the electronic controller to an alert device mounted to the flexible device body; establishing communications between the electronic controller and each of the sensing circuitry and the alert device based on the coupling of the electronic controller to the sensing circuitry and to the alert device, such that the electronic controller activates the alert device to produce an alert signal where a monitored electrical property in a user’s body is indicative of undesired muscle contraction.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0013] A flexible anti-clenching training device 5 (hereinafter “training device 5”) that uses a flexible printed circuit board 26 is described. A flexible printed circuit board 36, with a circuitry pattern formed thereon, electrically connects internal electronic components that are responsible for controlling the device 5. The flexible printed circuit board may contain a top surface 27 and an oppositely disposed bottom surface 28. Integral components of the device 5 that are distinct from the printed circuitry but function for operating the device 5 may be soldered, clamped, or otherwise attached to a top surface 27 of the printed circuit board 26. The bottom surface 28, eventually to form an exposed outer side of the device, may be coated in a rubberized, grippable material. To form the physical structure of the device 5, the flexible printed circuit board 26 may be folded in half so that the internal electrical connections of the top surface 27 may be made, while the bottom surface 28 of the printed circuit board 26 may be exposed. Folding the printed circuit board 26 in this way also creates two surfaces: a skin-contact side 20 and a top cover side 23. The skin-contact side 20 may be in direct contact with a user’s skin while the oppositely disposed top cover side 23 is accessible to a user. Electrical contact voids 16 may be located on the skin-contact side 20 of the printed circuit board 26 so that electrical contacts 40, which may be mounted to the bottom surface 28 of a printed circuit board 26, may protrude through the electrical contact voids 16 and be in direct contact with a user’s skin. The electrical contact voids 16 may be dispensed with, however, and suitable physical placement of components and electrical connections formed otherwise. A biocompatible adhesive 21, which is further discussed herein, may be present on the skin contact side 20, such as upon the electrical contacts 40.
[0014] Referring in particular now to
[0015] Referring to
[0016] Referring to
[0017] Generally, electrical signals are emitted when jaw or neck muscles are clenched or tightened. These signals may be detected by the electrical contacts 40, transmitted through the amplifier 30, picked up by the electronic controller 55, which may be coupled to the sensing circuitry 52, and translated to activate the wireless alert device 45. The wireless alert device 45 can be either a speaker or buzzer 36 capable of generating audio and/or tactile alerts. For example, in some embodiments, a Piezoelectric speaker may be used as the wireless alert device. The wireless alert device 45 may create an audible signal if the electrical contacts 40 detect a constant or repetitive increase in voltage that is indicative of muscle contraction over a series of alternating active and passive cycles. The alert signal 46 may then be triggered to notify a user of their clenched or tense muscles. The user-perceptible signal may be communicated wirelessly through other methods, including an application on a cellular device, or an earpiece.
[0018] In some embodiments, a sensor assembly 60 may include the sensing circuitry 52, the electronic controller 55, and electrical contacts 40. Further, the sensor assembly 60 may also include a rechargeable and/or replaceable power supply that provides power to the device 5. Multiple variations of a power supply may be used, but a practical strategy uses a battery 50. More specifically, an embodiment may use a single-use battery, a rechargeable battery, or a plug-in AC/DC power supply. Other embodiments include a Universal Services Bus (USB) port for connecting a sensor assembly 60 to a power supply and/or data communication link. The power supply may be controlled by an on/off switch 35 that may be situated in the middle section 17 and may be exposed on a top cover side 23. The on/off switch 35 may be readily accessible to and controlled by a user. In still other embodiments the sensor assembly may include components which allow the assembly to communicate data and/or charge wirelessly such as IEEE 802.11 standards (WiFi), IEEE 802.15 (Bluetooth®), or other suitable standards.
[0019] Turning now to
[0020] In one embodiment, activation of the on/off switch 35 may place the device 5 in a passive state, meaning the device is powered on but may not be actively measuring the electrical output of a particular muscle at that time. Once the allotted time for a passive state elapses, the device 5 may switch to an active state and simultaneously initiate a voltage reading. After the electrical output of a muscle is measured and recorded, the device 5 may revert to a passive state. An internal algorithm controls the length of time between each active and passive state. These cycles only occur when the on/off switch 35 is in the “on” position. If consistent voltage readings that are indicative of muscle clenching or tensioning are identified, the device may trigger the wireless alert device 45 to produce an alert signal 46 intended to notify a user of their actions. In other embodiments, the device 5 in the “on” state may actively record and measure voltage readings in a particular muscle until the device 5 is physically switched to the “off” position. Regardless of whether monitoring is continuous, intermittent, or takes still another form, a user can be trained by way of the feedback as to their muscle tensioning or clenching behavior to reduce or eliminate the behavior over time. The detection strategy may be less sensitive in the beginning to detect relatively hard or frequent muscle clenching only, and may become more sensitive over time. This type of strategic variation in sensitivity may help train a user to recognize and self-regulate their undesirable clenching behavior more consistently over time and avoid unduly frequent or irritating repetition of alerts, enabling the training to more gradually reduce undesired behavior.
[0021] The present description is for illustrative purposes only and should not be construed to narrow the breadth of the present disclosure in any way. Thus, those skilled in the art will appreciate that nigh-infinite modifications might be made to the presently disclosed embodiments without departing from the full and fair scope and spirit of the present disclosure. Other aspects, features, and advantages may be apparent upon an examination of the attached drawings and appended claims. As used herein, the articles “a” and “an” are intended to include on or more items, and may be used interchangeable with “one or more.” Where only one item is intended, the term “one” or similar language is used. Also, as used herein, the terms “has,” “have,” “having,” or the like are intended to be open-ended terms. Further, the phrase “based on” is intended to mean “based, at least in part, on” unless explicitly stated otherwise.