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The Plain Dealer
Cleveland, OH
Bedford man harnesses pain power, invents sling
to support injured limbs
05/19/03
Brian E. Albrecht
Plain Dealer Reporter
If necessity is the mother of invention, pain can be a really close cousin.
It's the kind of hurt known to anyone who's ever had to get around on
crutches due to a foot or ankle injury. It's the moment when, suddenly
off-balance, you reflexively slam down that wounded limb you've so carefully
held off the ground, and get an excruciating reminder of why you're not
supposed to put any weight on it.
Six years ago, Robert Webb, 39, of Bedford, swung his crutches into a
PetsMart store, sat down on the floor and started fitting dog harnesses
to his ankle cast in a quest to improve upon the old grit-your-teeth-and-bear-it
system of recovery mobility.
He emerged with a little harness that he wrapped around his ankle cast
and hooked, via bungee cord, to his belt. The elastic cord not only reduced
the strain of holding up his broken ankle, but also allowed lightly touching
the ground with his injured limb if he ever lost his balance. The Webb's
Leg Sling was off and hobbling.
An improved version - marketed by Webb's mother and stepfather through
their kitchen-table corporation, LS Products LLC - is now being used by
doctors at the Cleveland Clinic and South Pointe Hospital. The 8-ounce
device suspends the injured extremity several inches above the ground
with an adjustable strap buckled around the ankle and foot and connected
to elastic bands on a padded shoulder harness. LS Products co-founders
Wayne and Carol Urban hope that someday the leg sling will be as common
as casts and crutches.
And it all started on a winter day in 1997 when a chunk of frozen ground
gave way beneath a ladder Webb was climbing to install seamless gutters
on a house, dropping the ladder and future inventor to the ground. Webb
wasn't content to sit for five weeks while his ankle mended. The former
childhood builder of dirt bikes and go-carts from salvaged junk, who also
studied design at the Cleveland Institute of Art, set to work. After some
experimenting, he finally hit the harness/bungee combination, and was
even able to go back to work while wearing the sling (something he doesn't
recommend).
Dr. Joel Novack, co-chief of podiatry at South Pointe Hospital, has already
prescribed the sling for a handful of patients. "It'll work on just
about any condition that I operate on, and it would also be good for strains
and sprains in nonsurgical situations," he said. "From a medical
point of view, it provides the kind of protection a patient needs, with
a minimum of risk, and in a very simple way," Novack added. Dr. James
Sferra, head of the Cleveland Clinic's foot and ankle surgery section,
also has recommended the sling to patients.
Don Schoenthal, 37, of Independence, used the sling for six weeks after
breaking his leg, ankle and foot in a fall in January. He found the device
was particularly helpful when going up or down stairs on crutches. "There
were a couple times when I would've fallen otherwise," he said. "It's
great being able to just barely touch down and get your balance back.
Without it, you either slam your foot down and it hurts like heck, or
[you] fall over."
The Urbans plan to spend the coming year learning how to introduce their
product to the Cleveland-area medical community, then expand those efforts
nationally and internationally. Meanwhile, Webb and his stepfather are
thinking of taking a look at remedying another crutch complaint—armpit
ache. They've got some ideas along the lines of redistributing the load,
possibly spring-loading the crutches..."It'll take a lot of footwork,"
Webb said. Someone had better alert PetsMart.
© 2003 The Plain Dealer. Used with permission
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