All three of the above priority patent applications are incorporated by reference.
Dental implant surgeries and endodontal repair surgeries for, respectively, replacing and repairing a decaying tooth, a partially or entirely missing tooth, or an otherwise painful, unsightly, or unsuitable tooth are dental surgical options provided by dentists for resolving periodontal issues for their patients. Cotton and gauze have been used as spacer materials to preserve the way for subsequently coupling abutments and crowns to installed implants following osseointegration and/or for facilitating reaccess to a coupling component or to a cavity or canal pathway in a follow-on checkup or procedure. However, cotton and gauze can become sticky and disheveled over time, especially when soaked with bodily fluids, and straggling cotton fibers can provide pathways for microbes. It is desired to have alternative spacer articles and materials that exhibit sufficient porosity and autoclavability and can maintain their structural integrity, even when soaked in bodily fluids and subjected to oral vicissitudes, over extended periods of time.
Gingival retraction involves deflection of marginal gingiva away from a tooth. There exist multiple varieties of mechanical, chemo-mechanical, cordless and surgical retraction techniques. Retraction cords, chemical reagents, electrosurgery, laser tissue sculpting and hemostatic materials are often used when atraumatic displacement of gingival tissue is desired. Of these, gingival retraction cords are most commonly used, often in combination with chemical solutions, astringent gels, or hemostatic agents such as aluminum chloride which can cause gingival recession and can damage epithelial tissue and underlying connective tissues.
Gingival electrosurgery may be used for crevicular troughing but at a significant risk of causing long-term damage.
Retraction pastes have advantages such as comfort reported by patients, faster techniques, ease of use, no need for anesthesia, and reduced tissue trauma. Retraction pastes tend to perform less effectively at the deeper subgingival sites of deeper implants. Injectable materials can be used to form an expanding matrix to provide gingival retraction. As with retraction pastes, injectable matrices provide less effective retraction performance in procedures involving deeper implants.
A dental surgical retraction article is provided that may include a polymeric foam sponge that may be autoclavable at 250° F. and may have a porosity that is not less than a porosity of polyurethane. The dental article may be configured in size and shape for retracting a gingival flap during an oral surgery.
The polymeric foam sponge may exhibit an elongated shape. The polymeric foam sponge may include a cylindrical, ellipsoidal, tubular, wedge, prism, ovoid, triovoid, egg or pear shape, or combinations thereof.
The polymeric foam sponge may include polyurethane, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polyolefin, polyamide-imide, polymethylpentene (PMP), polyoxymethylene (POM), polyaryletherketone (PAEK), polyetheretherketone (PEEK), partially reticulated polyether type polyurethane, polyethyl polyurethane, thermoplastic foam, reactive resin foam, polyurethane foam, reaction injection molding plastic foam, flexible foam, thermoplastic polyurethane, mica-particulated polyurethane, resin-particulated polyurethane, resin-blended polyurethane, porous polyurethane, or polyurethane blend, or combinations thereof.
The polymeric foam sponge may include polyurethane blended with one or more additives for enhancing one or more characteristic material attributes. The one or more additives may include silicon oil, silicone surfactant, polyether, polyethyl, or molybdenum.
The one or more additives may include ethylene glycol, 1,4-butanediol (1,4-BDO or BDO), 1,6-hexanediol, cyclohexane dimethanol or hydroquinone bis(2-hydroxyethyl) ether (HQEE), or combinations thereof.
The one or more additives may include one or more difunctional, trifunctional or tetrafunctional Hydroxyl compounds or one or more difunctional amine compounds, or combinations thereof.
The one or more additives may include one or more difunctional hydroxyl compounds including Ethylene glycol, Diethylene glycol, Triethylene glycol, Tetraethylene glycol, Propylene glycol, Dipropylene glycol, Tripropylene glycol, 1,3-Propanediol, 1,3-Butanediol, 1,4-Butanediol, Neopentyl glycol, 1,6-Hexanediol, 1,4-Cyclohexanedimethanol, HQEE, Ethanolamine, Diethanolamine, Methyldiethanolamine, or Phenyldiethanolamine, or combinations thereof.
The one or more additives may include one or more trifunctional hydroxyl compounds including Glycerol, Trimethylolpropane, 1,2,6-Hexanetriol, or Triethanolamine, or combinations thereof.
The one or more additives may include one or more tetrafunctional hydroxyl compounds including Pentaerythritol, N,N,N′,N′-Tetrakis, (2-hydroxypropyl), or ethylenediamine, or combinations thereof.
The one or more additives may include one or more difunctional amine compounds including Diethyltoluenediamine or Dimethylthiotoluenediamine, or both.
A dental surgical retraction article is also provided that includes a sustainable green polyhydroxurethane foam sponge formed by combining polyamines and cyclic carbonates with polyols prepared from vegetable oils, dimer fatty acids, or fatty acids, or combinations thereof.
A method of manufacturing a dental surgical retraction article is also provided. The method may involve combining one or more aliphatic or cycloaliphatic isocyanates with one or more polyols including at least one polyether polyol that has a molecular weight of at least 2000.
The one or more polyols may include polycarbonate, polycaprolactone, polybutadiene, polysulfide, castor oil, soybean oil, cotton seed oil, neem seed oil, vegetable oil, dipropylene glycol, glycerine, or a sorbitol/water solution, or combinations thereof.
The method may also include chemically grafting dispersed styrene-acrylonitrile, acrylonitrile, or polyurea (PHD) polymer solids to a polyether backbone.
The one or more isocyanates may include 1,6-hexamethylene diisocyanate (HDI), 1-isocyanato-3-isocyanatomethyl-3,5,5-trimethyl-cyclohexane, isophorone diisocyanate (IPDI), or 4,4-diisocyanato dicyclohexylmethane (H12MDI or hydrogenated MDI), or combinations thereof.
A dental implant surgical spacer article is also provided. This dental article may include a polymeric foam sponge that is autoclavable at 250° F. and has a porosity not less than a porosity of polyurethane. The dental article may be configured in size and shape to preserve a volume above a dental implant for coupling an abutment to the dental implant during an osseointegration period.
The polymeric sponge may include a base end opposite a tapered end.
The polymeric sponge may include a tapered end to base end weight density ratio of at least 2:1.
The polymeric sponge may exhibit a conic or truncated conic shape.
The polymeric sponge may include a pyramid or truncated pyramid shape.
An endodontic spacer article may include a polymeric foam sponge that may be configured to temporarily preserve a prepared tooth cavity volume until filling material is ready for filling the cavity volume with permanent filling material.
The polymeric sponge may include an absorbed, adhered or trapped medicinal dosage, or combinations thereof.
The polymeric sponge may include a base end opposite a tapered end.
The polymeric sponge may include a tapered end to base end weight density ratio of at least 2:1.
The polymeric sponge may include a conic or truncated conic shape.
The polymeric sponge may exhibit a pyramid or truncated pyramid shape.
A polymeric foam sponge may be configured to protect sensitive or vulnerable mouth tissue from surgical equipment and ambient exposure during an oral surgery.
A dental surgical retraction method is also provided that may include placing a polymeric foam sponge at a gingival incision location to retract the gingival flap during an oral surgery.
A dental surgical spacer method is also provided. The method may include placing a polymeric foam sponge in a space next to an embedded dental implant to preserve a spacing for coupling an abutment to the dental implant after an osseointegration period.
A dental surgical protection method is also provided. The method may include placing a polymeric foam sponge against sensitive or vulnerable mouth tissue as protection from surgical equipment impacts and ambient exposure during an oral surgery.
A dental article is also provided. The dental article may include a polymeric foam sponge that is autoclavable at 250° F. and has a porosity not less than a porosity of polyurethane and is configured for insertion into a bone socket recess to nonadhesively contact and compress loose graft material contained therein.
The polymeric foam sponge may include polyurethane or polyurethane blend.
The polymeric foam sponge may include a porosity not less than a porosity of polyurethane.
The polymeric foam sponge may be further configured for maintaining a volume density integrity of compressed graft material when removing bodily fluids from the bone socket recess by suctioning said fluids through the polymeric foam sponge.
A guided tissue regeneration membrane may be configured to be disposed between graft material and a polymeric foam sponge during compression of the graft material by applying contact pressure nonadhesively to the sponge.
The membrane may be configured to remain over the graft material within the socket graft recess during an osseointegration period.
A dental bone socket grafting method is also provided. A bone socket recess defined within a patient's jawbone is prepared. After the preparing of the bone socket recess, the bone socket recess is filled with loose graft material. The loose graft material may be compressed within the bone socket recess by inserting a nonadhesive polymeric foam sponge into contact with the loose graft material therein and applying pressure to the sponge. The nonadhesive polymeric foam sponge may exhibit autoclavability at 250° F. and may have a porosity which is not less than a porosity of polyurethane.
The preparing of a bone socket recess may involve shape cutting or drilling into a tooth, or through gum tissue, or into some bone tissue, or combinations thereof.
The preparing of a bone socket recess may involve removing one or more of a decayed tooth, decayed tissue, excess tissue, microbial organic material, or inorganic debris, or combinations thereof.
The method may include suctioning fluid from the bone socket recess through the sponge.
In some example embodiments, a qube may relate to an article for application to human and animal teeth and human and animal dental implants as a medicated and non-medicated space maintainer and/or retraction medium (referred to herein as a QUBE, a Qube, or a qube). A Qube may include, in an example embodiment, a synthetic sponge-like material with a 1) specific porosity size 2) which is autoclavable 3) which can be colored 4) which can be used a vehicle to carry a medicament 1.2% Chlorohexidine, 5) which can be used a vehicle to carry a medicament Calcium hydroxide Ca(OH), 6) which can be used a vehicle to carry a medicament Povodine-Iodine solution, 7) which can be used a vehicle to carry a medicament 2% Iodine Potassium Iodide, 8) which can be used a vehicle to carry a Sterile saline. The Qube is to be applied as an interappointment dressing for endodontically treated teeth in the access cavity to serve as a barrier from microbial invasion of the canal space as well as a mechanism to prevent damage to surrounding tooth structure when a dentist re-accesses the tooth for permanent restoration. The Qube can also be used as a barrier from microbial invasion within the internal aspect of the coronal access of screw retained dental implants.
The Qube can also be used as a retraction medium for gingival flaps during dental surgery. The Qube can be contoured in specific shapes. The Qube can be impregnated with barium sulfate so it can be visible radiographically. The Qube can be inserted and compacted against gingival soft tissue to allow for atraumatic retraction.
The tapered shape of the wedge shaped qube of
One or both of the rectangular long sides may also be tapered or be triangularly-shaped, and a pyramidal qube or tetrahedral qube or truncated pyramid or truncated tetrahedron or cone-shaped, four or five sided pyramid, or pentagonal cone, pentagonal pyramid, truncated cone, half ellipsoid or partial ellipsoid or truncated ellipsoid. One or more of the long sides of a regular rectangular box, cube or polyhedron may be tapered or compressed spatially at one end.
An implant qube may be more densely-weighted at a tapered end, which may taper to a point or may round off or may be truncated such that a plane at a tapered end may be parallel to a base plane of greater area of a truncated implant qube, which may have small and large diameter circular end planes, or an elongated end plane quadrilateral having at least one short dimension which may taper to a point in one or both cross-plane dimensions.
Other qube types may include qubes having different colors or color distributions or different weights, or different overall weight densities (10 kg/m3, 15 kg/m3, 20 kg/m3, 25 kg/m3, 30 kg/m3, 35 kg/m3, 40 kg/m3), or different weight or weight density distributions (20&30 kg/m3, or different porosities, autoclavabilities (thermal: 250 F-300 F, 225 F-325 F, 200 F-275 F, 200 F-280 F, 270 F-280 F, 275 F-300 F, 275 F-325 F; pressure: 20 psi-30 psi, 25-35 psi, 25-30 psi, 23-28 psi, 24=27 psi, 28-36 psi, 24-38 psi)-indentation force deflection (IFD) capabilities, cell openness, cell densities (15-16 cells/cm, 10-20 cells/cm, medicament chemistry (calcium hydroxide CaOH, barium sulfide BaS, titanium dioxide TiO2, silver nitride Ag3N, silver nitrate AgNO3, silver ion Ag+, silver ion Ag−, 1.2% chlorohexidine, povidone-iodine 2% iodine potassium iodide, sterile saline), or medicament biology (bacteriocidal, medicament combinational process types (e.g., soaking, coating, encapsulating, embedding, integrating, release rate).
The photographs of
Moreover, in certain example embodiments, use of a qube during an oral surgery or during a step or subset of steps of an oral surgery, e.g., a dental implant surgery, a tooth or jawbone grafting surgery, or another oral surgery involving one or more retraction uses of one or more cubes. In example embodiments, a dental impression may be made, formed, generated or located such as to make a dental impression for molding a synthetic tooth, a grown organic tooth or a tooth graft or set of teeth to replace a tooth or teeth that may have become decayed or that may be colliding with another tooth or gum, cheek, tongue or lip area causing pain or that may be rooted unevenly within an upper or lower jaw in the front or back of the mouth or may have fallen out such that a synthetic replacement tooth or a grown organic replacement dental implant or similar oral constituent may be desired to take its place.
Example embodiments are provided herein that may involve one or more oral surgical steps, sequences of two or more steps, subsets of multiple steps or several steps, or complete oral surgical processes that involve use of a qube for retraction, maintaining space above or within a dental implant, abutment or crown, or providing temporary structural integrity support for a tooth, gum, dentin, pulp, root, enamel, bone-cementum, crown or combinations or component parts thereof, or for catching, filtering, redirecting, accumulating, or stabilizing or controlling flow rate, area coverage or contained volume density of bodily fluids, saliva, blood, mucous, water, partly digested food or dislodged food fragments or combinations or evolving quantities or components thereof during an oral surgery.
Example embodiments may advantageously further involve reduced pain, reduced swelling, and reduced tearing, scratching, slicing, stabbing or poking by sharp edges or jagged components of dental instruments, and reduced time to heal and enhanced effectiveness by placement and use of one or more qubes for protecting, cushioning, deflecting, bandaging, or covering one or more exposed, wounded, inflamed or otherwise sensitive areas within a patient's mouth during an oral surgery.
Example embodiments of dental processes, both surgical and non-surgical, advantageously include sequences of steps involving use of one or more qubes for retraction, maintaining space, cushioning, absorbing, softening, providing flexibility, strength without rigidity, and cohesiveness. After any of a wide variety of oral surgical steps, and in various orders and sequences of oral surgical steps, use of qubes throughout the surgical processes characteristically maintains an availability of choices of next steps, when to stop, how to provide a first dental care process and transition to a different oral state prepared to provide a second dental care process, while continuously, discretely, periodically and/or increasingly having an ability to return, and/or returning, suturing or positioning or orienting tissue to an original position or orientation due to no distortion or damage being caused by this retraction method involving use of a qube rather than a conventional retraction cord or other conventional retraction device or component.
The two or more subsets of sequential oral surgical steps, processes, actions or modifications may, in one example embodiment, be spaced apart in time. In an example embodiment, a time delay advantageously allows for sufficient osseointegration of a bone graft within a jawbone socket, or socket graft, for example, prior to a dental implant procedure. Such a dental implant procedure may itself follow a sudden, unexpected tooth loss collision event or a long and steady incremental tooth decay process, or an ordinary tooth extraction, or a drawn-out, crumbling tooth disintegration lasting perhaps years or another tooth and/or jawbone volume reducing event.
The two or more surgical process subsets may, in another example embodiment, be spaced apart in time in order to allow sufficient osseointegration of a dental implant inserted within a jawbone socket at a depth below a gingival margin anywhere in a range between a shallow implant coupling location through an average implant depth location to a deep implant coupling location that may be significantly below a gingival margin. In this example embodiment, a second surgical process subset may involve coupling within a dental implant component for maintaining a space for attaching an abutment after sufficient osseointegration of the implant has occurred over the passage of time.
FIG. 15D1 schematically illustrates teeth with a gap above the gumline and a socket recess defined as extending into the gum tissue and into bone tissue beneath with a qube 1533 draped over a graft-filled socket as in
FIG. 15D2 schematically illustrates teeth with a gap above the gumline and a socket recess defined as extending into the gum tissue and into the bone tissue beneath with a qube 1534 inserted or partially inserted into a partially graft-filled socket as in
While the invention has been described in terms of several embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced with modification and alteration. The description is thus to be regarded as illustrative.
This patent application is a Continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/913,019, filed Sep. 20, 2022; which is a 371 of PCT/US21/23544, filed Mar. 22, 2021; which claims the benefit of priority to U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 62/992,177, filed Mar. 20, 2020. This patent application, Ser. No. 17/913,019, is also a continuation in part of PCT/US21/21258, filed Mar. 5, 2021, which claims the benefit of priority to U.S. Ser. Nos. 62/985,731, filed Mar. 5, 2020 and 62/992,177, filed Mar. 20, 2020.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62992177 | Mar 2020 | US | |
62992177 | Mar 2020 | US | |
62985731 | Mar 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 17913019 | Sep 2022 | US |
Child | 18762776 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US21/21258 | Mar 2021 | WO |
Child | 17913019 | US |