The invention relates to a bite fork (also called a bite plate) for receiving a molding compound or a check-bite registration material, in particular with position marker elements for positioning in a positioning system, and a check-bite kit. Furthermore, it relates to a method and a system for displaying a dentition, in which such a bite fork may be employed.
Bite forks are well known working means in dental medicine, by means of which imprints of the tooth surfaces are taken, and can be further processed, in particular for the production of dental models. Commonly, they are one-piece plastic parts, which have been known in various forms of design. These plastic parts are filled or occupied with a so-called registration material (check-bite registration material), into which the tooth surfaces of the patient imprint as a so-called impression memorize entry when the bite fork is inserted into him and he bites into the check-bite registration material.
In connection with various dentist services, especially with provision of high-quality partial or full dentures or splints, display and animation of virtual tooth surfaces in computer units is desirable. For this purpose, a positioning system and a specially designed bite fork for use in the same have been proposed by the applicant in DE102 18 435 B4. The bite fork has an extension on which a holding device for position sensors or markers of the positioning system (e.g. ultrasound markers) can be attached. A more elaborate bite fork of this kind is also described in the unpublished document PCT/EP2011/058790 of the applicant. At that bite fork, an X-ray marker configuration is firmly attached or attachable.
a is a scheme of a check check-bite part 10A of the first known bite fork with a projection 11 on which a metal retaining disk with three locking holes 13 and a recording material (bite registration) 15, into which into the footprints of tooth surfaces are stamped, is provided.
b shows a position marker section 10B of the bite fork, that has a disc-shaped central part 21, and three arms 23a, 23b and 23c are provided on it, at the ends of which a position marker 25a, 25b and 25c, respectively, is located. In other configurations the position markers are arranged on an arched body. In the illustrated configuration, a cable 27 for supplying power to the position markers configured as active elements is provided; however, the position markers may also be passive and do not require a power supply, and consequently no connecting cable. The middle part 21 is designed for attachment to the circular part of the extension 11 of the check-check-bite part of
In DE 20 2011 105 953.0 of the applicant, improvement of the above-described bite forks, the core of which consists of a two-part design is described.
In recent years, detection of the tooth surfaces and overall geometry of the mouth internal cavity of patients using intraoral scanners has become more and more important. The images of the tooth surfaces and of the mouth cavity, respectively, acquired by such scanners are not readily adaptable for an animation and simulation of movements of the dentition.
Previously used bite forks are suitable for establishing the relation of extraoral scanners and the measured surfaces of tooth models to the position measuring systems. On the other hand, partial tooth surfaces, which are determined directly in the mouth by intraoral 3D surface scanners, cannot be easily correlated with position measuring systems. Furthermore, with intraoral scanners, large sections of the dental arch or the entire arch of the upper or lower jaw cannot be detected with high accuracy, because each of the relatively small tooth surfaces is determined and they must be matched to a large matching surface. In doing this, positioning errors add up accordingly.
The object of the invention is to provide an improved bite fork or bite plate, respectively, which offers improved diagnostic evidencing capabilities, especially with the use of new techniques in dental diagnostics.
This object is achieved by a bite fork having the features of claim 1. Furthermore, a check-bite kit having the features of claim 10 is provided. Furthermore, a system for moving image representation of teeth, comprising the features of claim 11, and an imaging process of the natural dentition having the features of claim 14 is provided. Suitable configurations of the inventive idea are the object the respective subclaims.
According to the invention the bite fork comprises recesses on the contact surface for partial visualization of the tooth surfaces for the detection of the tooth surface via an intraoral 3D surface scanner, and marker elements which are detectable by this this sensor. It thus is collectively and simultaneously employable with an intraoral scanner. In a preferred embodiment, the bite fork has a position marker part for obtaining “absolute” position data to be linked to these 3D image data. Instead of or in addition to a position marker part, besides the plug-on part having a position sensor, another sensor system may be provided that may provide additional data for the production of qualitatively or esthetically improved dental prostheses, respectively. The realization of the invention is also possible with a simple bite fork or bite plate without any sensor system.
The bite fork according to the invention enables relation between the measurement data from intraoral 3D surface scanners and the data of SD positioning systems and, at the same time, to detect tooth surfaces or the entire dental arch with high accuracy so as to be able to display the surfaces statically as well as in motion with high precision. This enables improved diagnostic statements as well as improved simulation options for force transmission and collision check during the manufacture of dentures in prosthetics and implantology.
In embodiments of the invention, the bite fork includes adjustment means for variably setting the opening portion of at least a portion of the recesses. In one embodiment, the adjustment means have displaceable bars which are designed such that they can connect an external rim region to an internal rim region or central region of the bite fork at different points of the extension thereof to each other. This design and configuration, with various methods (scanning or acquiring image impression) allows variable data of different tooth surfaces or teeth portions to be acquired and to be provided for combined evaluation. Optionally, the proposed adjustment means (specifically movable bars) may also be configured as being individually removable.
In a further embodiment, it is provided that at least one part of the marker elements is designed as a characteristic, optical or 3D detectable positive casts or impressions or optical or 3D-contrast markers, in particular as a series of positive casts or impressions or contrast markers, in one rim region or both rim regions of the is bite fork. In this embodiment, an intraoral 3D surface scanner, besides data of the tooth or jaw surface, at the same time acquires reference data for the combination of the bite fork preferably fixed by means of molding compound. However, this reference is basically to be realized also with other types of marker elements.
For example, at least part of the marker elements may be configured as radiopaque elements, which are attached to a base body of the bite fork or are embedded into the base body, the reference required is then produced by means of an X-ray image.
In another embodiment, the bite fork comprises a check-bite part having first attachment means and a position matter part or sensor part having second attachment means matching the first attachment means, which is releasably connected to the check bite part.
The configuration of the bite fork with a removable position marker part, on the one hand, provides for advantage in handling because the actual check-bite part is less bulky than the bite forks described above and does not interfere even with complex check-bite and positioning configurations involving maxillary and mandibular components. In particular, the position sensor may be placed onto the attachment attached to mandibular teeth, without causing spatial collision to the bite fork.
The proposed design increases applicabilities in that different position marker components may directly be added to the check-bite part without having to make efforts in material and logistics for the provision of complete bite forks.
In one aspect of this configuration, the first and second attachment means form and include first and second contact surfaces, respectively, which, in the connected state of the check-bite part and position marker part, abut against each other, thus defining a predetermined distinct position of the position marker part with respect to the bite marker part.
The proposed check-bite kit for the formation of different bite forks of the above-described type is characterized in that in addition to a check-bite part according to the invention multiple removable position marker parts or other accessory components (e.g. an apparatus for the determination of the facial symmetry) are provided with second attachment means matching the first attachment means (at the check-bite part).
The dental diagnostic system proposed according to a further aspect of the invention, in addition to a bite fork of the type set forth above, includes tooth surface detection means for providing an image of at least part of the tooth surfaces of the dentition, first position detection elements matching the position marker elements of the bite fork for position detection of the bite fork in the state of being inserted in the mouth of an individual, first processing means for correlating the image of the tooth surfaces and the position data of the bite fork for providing a spatial coordinate-accurate image of the tooth surfaces, one paraocclusal spoon to be attached to the teeth, having other position marker elements, second position detection means matching the further position marker elements for continuous position detection of the paraocclusal spoon during movements of the dentition and second processing means for the creation of the moving image representation of the dentition according to the image of the tooth surfaces in accordance with the spatial coordinates and the time-dependent position data of the paraocclusal spoon.
In a suitable embodiment, the tooth surface detection means are realized by an intraoral scanner, wherein the bite fork has markers, which are optically detectable by the scanner. In an alternative embodiment, the tooth surface detection means are realized by an X-ray image sensor, and radiopaque markers are provided at the bite fork.
In another embodiment, in an outermost mouth section of the bite fork, face surface detecting means for providing an image of at least one portion of the face of the individual are provided. The first processing means are then designed for correlating the image of the face surface with the position data of the bite fork and to provide an image of the face surface, and the second processing means are designed for providing a moving image representation of the face of the individual.
In configurations attainable with commercially available electronic components in a cost-effective manner, the position marker elements of the bite fork and/or the other position marker elements of the paraocclusal spoon have ultrasound markers, optical markers or marker elements, which are detectable by way of magnetic sensors.
Features of the method of the invention for imaging a dentition essentially directly arise from the system aspects of the invention set forth above and will not be repeatedly explained herein. However, it is to be noted that both under procedural and systemic aspects a moving image representation may advantageously be created by means of the bite fork according to the invention, but the scope of the invention is not limited thereto. Conventional methods for the production of dental prostheses may also benefit from the advantages of employing the bite plate according to the invention and the combined evaluation of 3D surfaces directly recorded in the patient's mouth. For example, certain problems that may occur with intraoral 3D scanners during imaging an entire dental arch can be corrected by way of the impressions taken with the bite fork of the invention. Additional benefits and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description of executive examples, wherein reference is made to the figures, wherein:
The check-bite part 41 includes a fork-shaped up to plate-shaped base body 41a onto which a short clamp-like extension 41b is provided, forming first attachment means of the bite fork 40, which is designed by attaching one of the position marker parts 43 or 45 according to
Both position marker parts, at a disc-shaped base body 43a or arc-shaped base body 45a, have second attachment means 43b and 45b, respectively, corresponding to the first attachment means 41b of the check-bite part. In the illustrated embodiment, both the check-bite part 41 and the position marker parts have accommodations to accommodate position markers, i.e. as extensions 41c and 43c at the respective base body of the check-bite part 41 and the position marker part 43, respectively, or as impressions 45c at the free ends of the arc-shaped base body 45a of the position marker part 45. In each figure, a spherical X-ray marker 41f and 43g, respectively, is shown by an arrow adjacent to one of the extensions, in order to make clear that it may be clamped thereto. It is also possible to produce the check-bite part and the position marker part with fixedly inserted position markers, for example the cast-in position markers 45g in
The second attachment means 43b and 45b are also configured in a clamp-like manner with two legs 43d, which together fit into recesses formed by the legs of the first clamp-like attachment means 41b at the check-bite part 41. At each of the legs 43d and 45d, respectively, extensions 43e and 45e are provided which serve as a handling for ease of compression of the legs for the insertion into the mounting bracket 41b at the check-bite part or for removal therefrom.
Small barbs 43f and 45f at the free ends of the legs 43d and 45d, respectively, slidably pass ribs 41d which are provided on the outer edges of the bracket 41b (perpendicularly extending to the plane of the two bracket legs), during insertion of the respective position marker part into the check-bite part, thus latching the respective position marker part to the check-bite part by way of the legs of the second attachment means, after having passed the ribs, slightly spreading behind them and thus anchoring. This anchoring is released by compressing the legs by handlings 43e and 45e, respectively, and the barbs may pass the ribs 41d and slide back for removing the position marker part from the check-bite part.
Modifications of the configurations set forth above are for example possible in that those openings (recesses) in the material of the bite fork—and hence in the registration material—are only provided at the left- or right-hand part. Even a configuration generally only designed as a “half-sided” bite plate may be provided with openings or recesses, respectively, for directly acquiring the tooth surfaces by way of a scanner.
The output data of the tooth surface detecting unit 105 and the position detection unit 107 as well as the camera image processing unit 109 enter inputs of a first processing unit 111, in which the image of the tooth surfaces represented by the image data and the processed position data of the bite fork are further processed to a (at least partial) coordinate-accurate image of the patient's teeth, wherein simultaneously a correlation with the image of the face surface of the patient can be made. Overall, in the first processing unit a set of data is acquired which enables coordinate-accurate pictorial representation of both dentition and face of the patient.
A tooth surface imprint acquired with the registration material in the bite fork 101 is processed in parallel in the traditional way, and the data obtained by this processing are entered by means of a correction data input unit 112 to verify the scanner and position data or is even used independently of the system described herein for other dental diagnostic purposes.
Another component of the system is constituted by a (known as such) paraocclusal spoon 113 with other position marker elements (not separately referred to), which is attached to the teeth of the mandible of the patient, such that it allows dentition movements and, in motion, continuously provides position data by way of its position markers. A second position detection unit 115 records and processes those position data recorded in motion, and a second processing unit 117 receives both the trajectory data acquired and the data series provided on the output side of the first processing unit and generates a moving image representation of the dentition and the patient's face, providing it to a output unit (which, in a manner known per se, may include a screen and other memory and processing means) for evaluation and analysis by a therapist.
The embodiment of the invention is not limited to these examples, but is also possible in a variety of modifications, which are within the scope of expert action.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2013 203 597.7 | Mar 2013 | DE | national |
10 2013 204 207.8 | Mar 2013 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/DE2014/200021 | 1/22/2014 | WO | 00 |