Leatt-Brace

Summary

The Leatt-Brace is a neck brace designed to help reduce neck injuries in helmeted sports, including Supercross, motocross, enduro, roadracing, downhill-type mountain biking, BMX, ATV, street riding, karting, and snowmobiling.[1] The brace is marketed and distributed worldwide by the Leatt Corporation, a Nevada corporation with its administrative office based in Cape Town, South Africa.[2]

History and description edit

South African inventor Dr. Christopher Leatt filed his first neck-brace-related patent in 2003. [3]

The Leatt-Brace is designed to work only when worn in conjunction with the full-face helmets typically used in the aforementioned activities. The brace uses what the inventor calls Alternative Load Path Technology to help absorb and disperse injury-producing forces.[4] The brace is designed to limit hyperflexion, hyperextension, lateral hyperflexion and posterior hypertranslation, which are extreme forward, backward, sideways, and rearward movement of the head on the neck.[5] Although the brace cannot protect against pure axial compression of the spine, it is designed to help minimize such loading, when coupled with one of the extreme movements above.[6]

In 2009, the Leatt-Brace received C/E approval, which is granted by European Union law. Gaining CE approval for Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) includes adhering to basic health and safety requirements as well as performance requirements. The Leatt-Brace was approved based on a review of the concept, design, operation and testing of the brace, and chemical analysis of brace components.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ Cornel Stan and co-authors (2007). Development trends of motorcycles 3. With 10 tables. Renningen. ISBN 978-3-8169-2752-5. OCLC 182724963.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ "Leatt Corporation". Retrieved 3 October 2012. Apparel worldwide.
  3. ^ Leatt History. Retrieved July 10 2016. http://leatt-corp.com/leatt-history/
  4. ^ Neural tissue biomechanics. Lynne E. Bilston. Berlin: Springer. 2011. pp. 175–177. ISBN 978-3-642-13890-4. OCLC 755574352.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. ^ Paton, Simon. "Leatt Neck Braces - THE REVIEW YOU MUST READ". PinkBike.com. Retrieved 26 November 2012.
  6. ^ Wong, Derryn. "The Leatt Moto GPX Club Neck Brace". WebBikeWorld.com. Retrieved 11 May 2012.

External links edit

  • Official Site
  • Zach Herrin Helps Develop the Leatt-Brace for Road Racing
  • Transworld Motocross Interview with Cornell DeJongh, lead biomedical engineer at Leatt-Brace