The present invention relates to the field of obturation methods for filling the root canals of teeth, and more specifically, to the phase of such methods where the canal in the tooth is filled using a filling material such as Gutta percha or some other type of material. The present invention relates, in particular, to the use of a filling material in the form of a paste which is introduced into the root canal using a root-canal instrument known as a “condenser”, which comprises a screw and which is arranged on a handpiece. The present invention also relates to a device for making filling material available and to a container for containing the filling material.
Procedures for filling root canals are already known in the art. For example, methods are known which make use of an instrument, the body of which is made of plastic and onto which Gutta percha is added. To perform the filling procedure, the assembly is introduced, after heating, into the canal. A major disadvantage with this method is that the plastic body remains in the canal and causes considerable inconvenience if the filling work being performed subsequently needs to be repeated.
Also known is a method which arranges the filling material on an instrument known as a “condenser”, which takes the form of a root-canal instrument with a screw, for example, a left-hand screw, arranged on a handpiece so that the filling material can be deposited or “condensed” into the canal by rotating the instrument in the opposite direction to the hand of the screw. To coat the instrument with filling material, such as Gutta percha for example, the Gutta percha is arranged in a syringe placed in a heater and the plunger of the syringe is actuated when the Gutta percha is ready so as to deposit the Gutta percha onto the root-canal instrument positioned adjacent to the outlet of the syringe.
Methods which make use of such condensers have two disadvantages. On the one hand, such methods do not allow precise control over the amount of Gutta percha applied to the root-canal instrument. On the other hand, because the amount of Gutta percha contained in the syringe is great, the dental practitioner is strongly tempted to treat several root canals belonging to different patients using the same syringe. In this latter case, there is then a risk that the practitioner will contaminate the second patient (or patients) with bacteria from the first patient (or patients).
The present invention overcomes these drawbacks by presenting the filling material in the form of at least one dose arranged in a cartridge type container. Each dose is an individual dose, corresponding roughly to the amount needed to treat and fill just one canal. The root-canal instrument is plunged, rotating or stationary, into one of the cartridges containing a dose of filling material, providing just the amount of filling material needed to carry out the operation of filling the root canal so that the proper amount of filling material is picked up on the walls of the root-canal instrument. This makes it possible to fill the root canal of the tooth using just the amount of filling material needed, and under optimum hygiene conditions.
The device for making the filling material available in accordance with the present invention is notable in that it allows at least one cartridge containing filling material in a dose roughly corresponding to the amount needed to treat and fill one single canal to be brought up to and maintained at the desired temperature.
The cartridge type container for the filling material which allows the filling of root canals in accordance with the present invention is notable in that it contains at least one dose of filling material roughly corresponding to the amount needed to treat and fill one single canal. The cartridge type container can therefore be sold independently, or in large quantities, ready for use and disposable after use.
The present invention will be better understood with reference to the description of two embodiments of the invention which is given below by way of example, together with the following drawings.
The method of the present invention is a method for filling root canals using a filling material (1) such as Gutta percha or some other type of filling material. The filling material, in the form of a paste, is introduced into the root canal using a root-canal instrument (2) known as a “condenser”, which comprises a screw and which is arranged on a handpiece (3).
In accordance with the present invention, the filling material (1) is in the form of a dose (4), each of which is arranged in a cartridge (5). Each dose (4) roughly corresponds to the amount of filling material needed to treat and fill one single canal.
To deposit the filling material (1) on the root-canal instrument (2), the root-canal instrument (2) is plunged, rotating or stationary, into one of the cartridges (5) containing a dose (4) of the filling material (1) so that just the amount of filling material needed for the filling operation is picked up on the walls of the root-canal instrument (2), as is illustrated in
To fill the root canal, all that is then required is for the root-canal instrument (2) to be correctly positioned in the root canal and made to rotate in the opposite direction to the hand of the screw so as to fill the root canal with filling material (1). It should be noted that, by virtue of the method of the present invention, it is not necessary to reverse the direction of rotation of the screw of the root-canal instrument in order to load the screw with filling material.
The device (6) can, for example, take the form of a unit (7) comprising a number of recesses (8), each of which can receive a cartridge (5). One or more of the recesses (8) are formed in a heat-conducting heating body (9) which can be heated, for example, using a resistive electric element, to raise at least one cartridge (5) to the desired temperature and to maintain the cartridge (5) at that temperature. The device (6) may further comprise a switch (10) and an operating indicator (11).
The cartridge (5) illustrated in
The thermal mass (15) is accessible toward the bottom of the pot (13) and has a female cavity which accommodates a heating rod (18). The insulated surface (17) forms a lid on the pot (13), and has a circular shoulder (19) which collaborates with a trigger (20) articulated to the body (7′) to allow the pot (13), possibly with a cartridge (5), to be locked in and released from the device (6′). The trigger (20) operates to hold the pot (13) in its housing and, when the pot (13) is removed, to completely close off the housing to prevent dirt from entering the housing, which could then disturb the contact between the heating body and the thermal mass of the pot (13). Furthermore, the trigger (20) prevents the risk of contact between fingers and the high-temperature heating body. The thickness of the trigger (20) is such that it can be moved aside simply, under the pressure of the pot, held by hand by the user.
The thermal inertia of the mass (15) allows the user to work while leaving the device as it is, and handling only the pot and the cartridge it contains. The pot and its thermal mass may be sterilized, while the doses (the cartridges) can be sold sterile. As a consequence, the device (6′) is more flexible to use than the alternative device (6) shown in FIGS. 1 to 3.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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99/10217 | Aug 1999 | FR | national |
This is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/049,350, filed Jan. 30, 2002.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10049350 | Jan 2002 | US |
Child | 10963235 | Oct 2004 | US |