The invention relates to a device and a method for manufacturing a dental prosthesis.
A number of methods are known for the computer-assisted manufacture of dental prostheses, such as milling of ceramic blanks according to 3-D data records (EP 904 743, DE 198 38 238 A1, DE 101 07 451 A1, CEREC® system from Sirona, PROCERA® system from Degussa, LAVA® system from 3M-Espe), or the use of rapid prototyping methods (DE 101 117 04 A1; DE 101 14 290 A1).
It is also known to perform the articulation function totally or partially on the computer, rather than mechanically (“Verbatim,” Spring 2000, U.S. Pat. No. 6,152,731 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,322,359).
The object of the invention is to develop a method for manufacturing dental prostheses whereby as much as possible of the entire planning and implementation proceeds in a computer-controlled or computer-assisted manner.
A manufacturing method for dental prostheses is described herein, in which the placement of the teeth is also virtually performed on the computer. The data records for fabricated teeth are fitted into a virtual model of the oral situation. The denture base can be manufactured directly from the subsequentl data, using CAM methods, or the fabricated teeth are inserted in the physical model.
The invention thus relates to a method for manufacturing a dental prosthesis, having the following steps:
The method proceeds as follows, by way of example: First, the 3-dimensional anatomical relationships in the oral cavity are recorded in a data record, according to current, common methods. The data may either be recorded directly from the patient, such as with a 3-D camera, a microlaser optical device, a computerized tomography apparatus, or an ultrasound apparatus, or the conventionally prepared plaster model is scanned. The data for optionally present bite rims and occlusion rims may likewise be recorded. It is also recommended that the mandibular data, which normally are taken on the patient for placement of the articulator, be recorded in the system. A data record D0 is thus produced.
Next, the data are prepared in such a way that the geometric relationships relevant for a virtual placement of teeth are present in the computer as a 3-D model. This is referred to below as data record D1.
At this point in the method, the dental prostheses to be used later must be selected by the user. This selection is made from a data record D3, which comprises previously scanned, synthetic prefabricated denture teeth of various sizes and shapes. As a rule the desired tooth shape (such as triangular or square) is selected. The geometric data for the oral situation allow the system to determine the suitable size of the teeth. The prefabricated denture teeth have surfaces which allow an optimal occlusion. A suggestion from the system is then obtained, so that the shape and size as well as the particular distances between the teeth—or also a slightly offset configuration—result in an optimal occlusion for a mandibular movement (data record D2). Inspection of the aesthetic appearance can be performed directly on the screen. It is also possible to generate a frontal view, and to insert this view into the digital photography of the patient's face.
At this point the user has the option to deviate from the optimized model and produce a natural appearance by manually relocating individual teeth and observing the result directly on the screen. For example, using a drag and drop technique the position of an individual tooth can be moved in any desired spatial direction. The system corrects the adjacent and opposing teeth immediately, so that an optimal bite is again produced and a data record D2A is created. The occlusion data for all the opposing teeth may also be edited so that graphic or numerical data are present which evaluate the modified situation as to whether it is more or less favorable than the previous situation. Of course, the previous condition (D2) may be restored if the values are unsatisfactory or incorrect, and then another dental position can be tried out—provided that the aesthetic impression and the occlusion data are satisfactory.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are such that following step f
In each step of the method it is possible to reconstruct the mandibular movements on the computer in the form of the known virtual articulator.
After the operation on the virtual model is completed, the transfer to the prosthesis can be performed; i.e., a denture base with positioning aids for the teeth is manufactured according to the data for the virtual placement of the teeth. Only the applicable selected prefabricated teeth then need be inserted in the denture base.
The denture base can be directly produced, or a casting mold can be made for the denture base. Methods such as milling or rapid prototyping may be used.
To ensure an exact fit of the synthetic teeth in the denture base, the following methods, for example, can be used, which are explained with reference to the figures.
Specialized structures can be provided at the positions on the denture base on which the synthetic teeth are to be placed. These structures must:
As an example, it is possible to prepare a plateau on the denture base which has three hemispherical prominences 1, configured in a triangle, which can be positioned unambiguously in recesses 2 in the denture base congruent thereto. Five degrees of freedom are established by the spatial orientation of the position on the plateau. The prominences are used to define the sixth degree of freedom (rotation about the vertical axis of the tooth). The prominences can be designed so that the teeth may be snapped in, for example by a push-button shape.
To avoid modifying the base of the synthetic teeth, a ring-like shape 3 (in the figure, filled in with black in cross section) can be created which exactly matches and defines the geometry of the respective synthetic tooth. The synthetic tooth can be inserted in this attachment so that the spatial orientation of the tooth with reference to the attachment is always constantly defined. In the manufacture of the denture base, corresponding shape-congruent recesses 4 are prepared or opened up which again ensure an exact, defined positioning of the attachment in all six degrees of freedom. Thus, the attachment can be positioned in a defined manner and the corresponding synthetic tooth (including the known spatial orientation with respect to the attachment) can be affixed. After the synthetic tooth is affixed, the attachment can be discarded.
The invention further relates to a device for carrying out the method for manufacturing a dental prosthesis, essentially comprising the following components:
The individual components of the device are explained in detail below:
It should be understood that the preceding is merely a detailed description of one or more embodiment(s) of this invention and that numerous changes to the disclosed embodiment(s) can be made in accordance with the disclosure herein without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. The preceding description, therefore, is not meant to limit the scope of the invention. Rather, the scope of the invention is to be determined only by the appended claims and their equivalents.
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