US2444379A - Therapeutic cabinet - Google Patents

Therapeutic cabinet Download PDF

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Publication number
US2444379A
US2444379A US592341A US59234145A US2444379A US 2444379 A US2444379 A US 2444379A US 592341 A US592341 A US 592341A US 59234145 A US59234145 A US 59234145A US 2444379 A US2444379 A US 2444379A
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lamps
cabinet
opening
housing
therapeutic
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US592341A
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John T Sexton
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61NELECTROTHERAPY; MAGNETOTHERAPY; RADIATION THERAPY; ULTRASOUND THERAPY
    • A61N5/00Radiation therapy
    • A61N5/06Radiation therapy using light

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  • This invention relates to ray treating appliences of the portable character, and has for its primary aim to provide a therapeutic cabinet, designed to house ray lamps of the type known to be helpful in the treatment of skin diseases and that has unique structure for holding the member being treated in proper position with respect to said lamps.
  • One of the important aims of this invention is the provision of a therapeutic cabinet that is convenient to use, effective in its operation, inexpensive to manufacture, and capable of treating an individual member of the human body without affecting other parts thereof.
  • Fig. l is a front elevational view of a therapeutic cabinet, made in accordance with the present invention.
  • Fig. 2 is a vertical cross sectional view taken on line IIII of Fig. 1.
  • the therapeutic cabinet contains two ray lamps in and I2 respectively, that are so disposed as to insure uniform treatment of the member I4 that is projected into cabinet 16, through opening l8 formed in the side wall 20 thereof.
  • This wall 20 includes a swingable portion 22 that may be hinged as at 24 to top wall 26.
  • cabinet l6 becomes a complete housing for lamps Ill and I2 and no light rays escape therefrom without first coming into contact with member l4 when the device is in use.
  • the support 36 is in the form of an inclined partition, disposed between lamps I and I2.
  • This support 36 comprises an open frame 38 and a foraminous panel 40 upon which member l4 rests when treatment is under way.
  • Frame 38 is hinged as at 42 and may be lifted by grasping knob 44 when extension 46 is to be stored within the cabinet upon bottom 30 and below support 36.
  • Lamps l0 and I2 are usually operated from a conventional source of power, but a transformer 46' is often times needed, and in such cases, this said transformer 46' is housed within cabinet IS in a place clearly shown by Fig. 2.
  • Suitable conductors 48 interconnect lamps l0 and P2 with transformer 46' and the cabinet is ready for use when connector 50 is joined to the conventional house current.
  • Support 36 is substantially mid-way between lamps Ill and I2. These lamps are tubular and therefore, when member I4 is resting upon the foraminous panel 40, all of its surface will receive the rays for treatment.
  • a cabinet of the character described comprising a housing having top, bottom, sideand end walls; an opening formed in one of the side Walls; therapeutic lamps in the housing at the bottom and at the top thereof respectively; and a support for a member being treated disposed within the housing adjacent the opening and between the said lamps, said support comprising a partition having a foraminous panel thereon, the partition being inclined upwardly and rearwardly from the lower edge of the opening, said lamps being adjacent to the wall of the housing opposite the opening, the uppermost portion of the side wall having the opening formed therein being swingable inwardly to increase the size of the opening and to permit positioning the member being treated nearer the lamps said partition being hingeclly mounted at its uppermost edge to the inner face of the other side wall to permit access to the lamp at the bottom of the housing, the lowermost end of the partition being spaced from said bottom wall and held against downward movement by the lower edge of said opening.
  • a therapeutic cabinet for the treatment of the human foot comprising a housing having top, bottom, side and end walls; an opening formed in one of the side walls; therapeutic lamps in the housing at the bottom and top thereof respectively; and a support for a foot being treated disposed within the housing between said lamps, said support comprising a partition having a foraminous panel thereon of sufficient rigidity to withstand the weight of said foot, the
  • partition being inclined upwardly and rearwardly from the lower edge of said opening, said lamps being adjacent to the side wall of said housing opposite the opening, the uppermost portion of the side wall having the opening formed therein comprising a stiff, fiat panel hingedly mounted on said top wall for swingable movement inwardly into said housing to increase the size of the opening and to permit positioning of the foot being treated nearer the lamps, said portion depending from said top wall and intersecting a part of the rays of light emanating from said lamps, said partition being hingedly mount- ,ed at its uppermost edge to the inner face of the other side Wall to permit access to the lamp at the bottom of the housing.

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  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Biomedical Technology (AREA)
  • Pathology (AREA)
  • Nuclear Medicine, Radiotherapy & Molecular Imaging (AREA)
  • Radiology & Medical Imaging (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Animal Behavior & Ethology (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Public Health (AREA)
  • Veterinary Medicine (AREA)
  • Radiation-Therapy Devices (AREA)

Description

INVENTOR. %0 Z0 June 29, 1948. v J: sEx 2,444,379
THERAPEUT I C GAB INET Filed May 7, 1945 Patented June 29, 1948 THERAPEUTIC CABINET John T, Sexton, Kansas City, Mo.
Application May 7, 1945, Serial No. 592,341
2 Claims. (Cl. 128375) This invention relates to ray treating appliences of the portable character, and has for its primary aim to provide a therapeutic cabinet, designed to house ray lamps of the type known to be helpful in the treatment of skin diseases and that has unique structure for holding the member being treated in proper position with respect to said lamps.
One of the important aims of this invention is the provision of a therapeutic cabinet that is convenient to use, effective in its operation, inexpensive to manufacture, and capable of treating an individual member of the human body without affecting other parts thereof.
Structural details are important and constitute other aims of the invention. These aims and objects will appear during the course of the following specification, referring to the accompanying drawing, wherein:
Fig. l is a front elevational view of a therapeutic cabinet, made in accordance with the present invention; and
Fig. 2 is a vertical cross sectional view taken on line IIII of Fig. 1.
In the form of the invention chosen for illustration, the therapeutic cabinet contains two ray lamps in and I2 respectively, that are so disposed as to insure uniform treatment of the member I4 that is projected into cabinet 16, through opening l8 formed in the side wall 20 thereof. This wall 20 includes a swingable portion 22 that may be hinged as at 24 to top wall 26. Thus, the eyes of the patient will be protected from the rays emanating from lamp l2 and as the member I4 is shifted, shield 22 will freely swing to alter the size of opening it. When in the normal position, shield 22 will be held by the action of gravity, in the position shown in dotted lines of Fig. 2.
The side wall 28 opposite to opening i8 is solid and uninterrupted as are bottom 30, top 26 and end walls 34. Thus, cabinet l6 becomes a complete housing for lamps Ill and I2 and no light rays escape therefrom without first coming into contact with member l4 when the device is in use.
The support 36 is in the form of an inclined partition, disposed between lamps I and I2. This support 36 comprises an open frame 38 and a foraminous panel 40 upon which member l4 rests when treatment is under way. Frame 38 is hinged as at 42 and may be lifted by grasping knob 44 when extension 46 is to be stored within the cabinet upon bottom 30 and below support 36.
Lamps l0 and I2 are usually operated from a conventional source of power, but a transformer 46' is often times needed, and in such cases, this said transformer 46' is housed within cabinet IS in a place clearly shown by Fig. 2.
Suitable conductors 48 interconnect lamps l0 and P2 with transformer 46' and the cabinet is ready for use when connector 50 is joined to the conventional house current.
Support 36 is substantially mid-way between lamps Ill and I2. These lamps are tubular and therefore, when member I4 is resting upon the foraminous panel 40, all of its surface will receive the rays for treatment.
Cabinets of different form and structure than that illustrated and described, might be made without departing from the spirit of the invention or scope of the appended claims.
Having thus described the invention, what is claimed as new and desired to be secured by Letters Patent is:
1. A cabinet of the character described comprising a housing having top, bottom, sideand end walls; an opening formed in one of the side Walls; therapeutic lamps in the housing at the bottom and at the top thereof respectively; and a support for a member being treated disposed within the housing adjacent the opening and between the said lamps, said support comprising a partition having a foraminous panel thereon, the partition being inclined upwardly and rearwardly from the lower edge of the opening, said lamps being adjacent to the wall of the housing opposite the opening, the uppermost portion of the side wall having the opening formed therein being swingable inwardly to increase the size of the opening and to permit positioning the member being treated nearer the lamps said partition being hingeclly mounted at its uppermost edge to the inner face of the other side wall to permit access to the lamp at the bottom of the housing, the lowermost end of the partition being spaced from said bottom wall and held against downward movement by the lower edge of said opening.
2. A therapeutic cabinet for the treatment of the human foot comprising a housing having top, bottom, side and end walls; an opening formed in one of the side walls; therapeutic lamps in the housing at the bottom and top thereof respectively; and a support for a foot being treated disposed within the housing between said lamps, said support comprising a partition having a foraminous panel thereon of sufficient rigidity to withstand the weight of said foot, the
partition being inclined upwardly and rearwardly from the lower edge of said opening, said lamps being adjacent to the side wall of said housing opposite the opening, the uppermost portion of the side wall having the opening formed therein comprising a stiff, fiat panel hingedly mounted on said top wall for swingable movement inwardly into said housing to increase the size of the opening and to permit positioning of the foot being treated nearer the lamps, said portion depending from said top wall and intersecting a part of the rays of light emanating from said lamps, said partition being hingedly mount- ,ed at its uppermost edge to the inner face of the other side Wall to permit access to the lamp at the bottom of the housing.
JOHN T. SEXTON.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
Number Number 4 UNITED STATES PATENTS Name Date George Feb. 21, 1899 Norwood Sept. 19, 1905 Fetter Oct. 1, 1912 Hammerstein Apr. 17, 191"! Ruiter Oct. 8, 1918 Crum Nov. 9, 1920 Lower et al Sept. 15, 1936 Gray Apr. 5, 1938 Trone Feb. 22, 1944 FOREIGN PATENTS Country Date Great Britain Apr. 28, 1905 Great Britain July 23, 1901
US592341A 1945-05-07 1945-05-07 Therapeutic cabinet Expired - Lifetime US2444379A (en)

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Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2561341A (en) * 1945-12-28 1951-07-24 Jr Robert A Clark Combination fluorescent and germicidal lamp fixture
US3101716A (en) * 1961-01-13 1963-08-27 Jr Edward Shelton Cornell Cabinet for treating limbs with radiation
FR2556597A1 (en) * 1983-12-19 1985-06-21 Shibuya Kogyo Co Ltd DEVICE FOR THE TREATMENT OF ATHLETE FOOT BY IRRADIATION WITH A LASER BEAM
US5163426A (en) * 1987-06-26 1992-11-17 Brigham And Women's Hospital Assessment and modification of a subject's endogenous circadian cycle
US5167228A (en) * 1987-06-26 1992-12-01 Brigham And Women's Hospital Assessment and modification of endogenous circadian phase and amplitude
US5545192A (en) * 1987-06-26 1996-08-13 Brigham And Women's Hospital Intermittent use of bright light to modify the circadian phase
US6761730B1 (en) 2002-06-21 2004-07-13 William Johnson Portable feet tanning device
US6899724B1 (en) 2003-04-21 2005-05-31 William Johnson Circular bulb portable feet tanning device
US20070038273A1 (en) * 2005-08-10 2007-02-15 Maurice Bales Method and apparatus for improved photon irradiation therapy and treatment of pain
US20080255640A1 (en) * 2007-02-02 2008-10-16 David Jeffrey Kipp Portable Phototherapy Device
US9375586B2 (en) * 2013-03-15 2016-06-28 Pavel V. Efremkin Apparatus and method for treatment of foot and nail diseases

Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US619953A (en) * 1899-02-21 Bathing apparatus
GB190114990A (en) * 1901-07-23 1902-06-19 Robert Otto Improvements in and relating to Light Bath Straddle-stools.
US799664A (en) * 1905-02-18 1905-09-19 Robert R Norwood Apparatus for treating ankylosis or the knee.
GB190509012A (en) * 1905-04-28 1905-12-14 Herbert John Dowsing Improved Light Bath Cabinet.
US1040238A (en) * 1910-10-22 1912-10-01 Adolph J Petter Bathing apparatus.
US1222945A (en) * 1916-06-14 1917-04-17 Oscar Hammerstein Medical apparatus.
US1280857A (en) * 1915-10-16 1918-10-08 David Marcus Brower Electrotherapeutic apparatus.
US1358060A (en) * 1919-08-18 1920-11-09 Winfield S Crum Therapeutic bath-cabinet
US2054332A (en) * 1933-11-03 1936-09-15 Alfred E Lower Electric therapeutic lamp
US2113253A (en) * 1935-12-24 1938-04-05 Western Electric Co Therapeutic apparatus
US2342229A (en) * 1943-08-18 1944-02-22 Maud E Trone Combined solarium and airing cabinet

Patent Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US619953A (en) * 1899-02-21 Bathing apparatus
GB190114990A (en) * 1901-07-23 1902-06-19 Robert Otto Improvements in and relating to Light Bath Straddle-stools.
US799664A (en) * 1905-02-18 1905-09-19 Robert R Norwood Apparatus for treating ankylosis or the knee.
GB190509012A (en) * 1905-04-28 1905-12-14 Herbert John Dowsing Improved Light Bath Cabinet.
US1040238A (en) * 1910-10-22 1912-10-01 Adolph J Petter Bathing apparatus.
US1280857A (en) * 1915-10-16 1918-10-08 David Marcus Brower Electrotherapeutic apparatus.
US1222945A (en) * 1916-06-14 1917-04-17 Oscar Hammerstein Medical apparatus.
US1358060A (en) * 1919-08-18 1920-11-09 Winfield S Crum Therapeutic bath-cabinet
US2054332A (en) * 1933-11-03 1936-09-15 Alfred E Lower Electric therapeutic lamp
US2113253A (en) * 1935-12-24 1938-04-05 Western Electric Co Therapeutic apparatus
US2342229A (en) * 1943-08-18 1944-02-22 Maud E Trone Combined solarium and airing cabinet

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2561341A (en) * 1945-12-28 1951-07-24 Jr Robert A Clark Combination fluorescent and germicidal lamp fixture
US3101716A (en) * 1961-01-13 1963-08-27 Jr Edward Shelton Cornell Cabinet for treating limbs with radiation
FR2556597A1 (en) * 1983-12-19 1985-06-21 Shibuya Kogyo Co Ltd DEVICE FOR THE TREATMENT OF ATHLETE FOOT BY IRRADIATION WITH A LASER BEAM
US5163426A (en) * 1987-06-26 1992-11-17 Brigham And Women's Hospital Assessment and modification of a subject's endogenous circadian cycle
US5167228A (en) * 1987-06-26 1992-12-01 Brigham And Women's Hospital Assessment and modification of endogenous circadian phase and amplitude
US5176133A (en) * 1987-06-26 1993-01-05 Brigham And Women's Hospital Assessment and modification of circadian phase and amplitude
US5304212A (en) * 1987-06-26 1994-04-19 Brigham And Women's Hospital Assessment and modification of a human subject's circadian cycle
US5545192A (en) * 1987-06-26 1996-08-13 Brigham And Women's Hospital Intermittent use of bright light to modify the circadian phase
US6761730B1 (en) 2002-06-21 2004-07-13 William Johnson Portable feet tanning device
US6899724B1 (en) 2003-04-21 2005-05-31 William Johnson Circular bulb portable feet tanning device
US20070038273A1 (en) * 2005-08-10 2007-02-15 Maurice Bales Method and apparatus for improved photon irradiation therapy and treatment of pain
US20080255640A1 (en) * 2007-02-02 2008-10-16 David Jeffrey Kipp Portable Phototherapy Device
US8961579B2 (en) * 2007-02-02 2015-02-24 Medtek Lighting Corporation Portable phototherapy device
US9375586B2 (en) * 2013-03-15 2016-06-28 Pavel V. Efremkin Apparatus and method for treatment of foot and nail diseases

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