The present invention relates to a device for dental prostheses, in particular an instrument for achieving parallelism between the bipupillar line and the occlusal plane.
The use of the articulator in fitting dental prostheses so as to keep the casts of the two dental arches in a suitable position, such as for example in U.S. Pat. No. 5,176,515 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,386,868 is known.
An articulator 100 (see
The hinge along the axis X2 simulates the complex biomechanics of the mandibular articulation. The two casts of the dental arches, of which one indicated by reference numeral 160, are fixed between the support 152 and the base 150.
With the articulator various adjustments are possible to reproduce the movement between the two arches. Essentially the articulator is also used in combination with a facebow or transfer-bow for the correct stereometric measurement of the maxillary or occlusal plane.
In the book “Principles of Aesthetic Integration” by Claude R. Rufenacht, and in other works, the importance of the dentist's focus on strictly aesthetic aspects is emphasized. Basic parameters of attractiveness indicate that for a smile to be attractive it should, among other things, have an incisal plane (roughly the occlusal plane TH] parallel to the bipupillar line EY. Everyone diverges from the ideal parameters of
The articulator is designed to simulate the angle a in the laboratory but there is no articulator which simulates the angle β. In practice, the angle β is measured from the patient in the clinic using the facebow and then the dental technician laterally inclines the entire articulator by the same angle β using improvised or artificially added means such as for example plasticine placed by trial and error under the base 150.
Clearly, this and other rough systems are inaccurate, laborious and inconvenient. An accurate, versatile, reliable and economical systemis therefore required.
The main object of the invention is to make a device for modelling dental prostheses which makes it possible to transfer the aesthetic information contained in the angle β to an articulator in a simple and precise manner.
Another object is to make a universal device applicable to any articulator.
Such objects are achieved by a device as defined in the appended claims.
The invention also relates to an articulator comprising means for inclining one side of the entire articulator in an adjustable manner in relation to a support plane so as to incline the models of prostheses insertable in the articulator to correct non-parallelism between the occlusal plane and the bipupillar line.
In addition, the invention also relates to a method of calibrating an articulator as defined above, comprising the steps of:
The invention also refers to an articulator accessory, separate from the articulator and able to be combined with it to lend the articulator new functions.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will be more clearly evident from the description of an example of the device according to the invention, together with the appended drawings wherein:
A device according to the invention is formed by a regulator foot 10 which comprises a hollow cylindrical body 12, elongated along an axis X, from which two arms 14,16 separated at a certain distance from each other jointly extend -along an axis Y perpendicular to the axis X. The arm 14 extends from one end of the body 12, while the opposite arm 16 is distanced from the base (or free edge) 15 of the body 12.
The body 12 has a pass-through axial cavity 13 along the axis X in which a pin 40 can be housed with minimum play, the pin 40 being provided at one end with a row of notches or incisions 42 on its lateral surface.
On the lateral surface of the body 12, on the side opposite the arms 12, 14, there is an internally threaded portion (or element) 20 (e.g. a nut welded to the body 12) which a screw 32 can be screwed into, along the axis Y, the shank of which may selectively project inside the cavity 13. To such purpose the body 12 is laterally perforated at the point of such element 20.
The arm 14 is bored and internally threaded from one side to the other so that a threaded dowel 30 can be inserted and screwed therein. The dowel 30 is orientated in such a way that by screwing it or unscrewing it moves further towards or away from the opposite arm 16 projecting from the arm 14 inside the empty space separating the two arms 14, 16. Essentially the distance between the arm 16 and the projecting head of the dowel 30 can be regulated by screwing the dowel 30.
The foot 10 is used to incline the articulator by the angle β as defined above, that is, to transfer the angle β to it and take it into consideration during modelling of the prosthesis.
The foot 10 is used as follows. One side of the base 50 of the articulator is placed between the arms 16, 14 (see the dotted line in
To correctly establish an angle equal to β on the articulator as measured on the patient, it is sufficient to measure the inclination of the articulator and find the notch 42 achieving the desired angle β.
For greater stability the operation may be repeated with another foot 10 applying it to the same side of the base 50 beside the former.
For greater ease of rotation, the screws 30, 32 and 74 may be of the wing type. The pin 40 may also be completely smooth (without the notches 42) and/or have a slight frustoconical shape, with the wider part coming out of the cavity 13.
The foot 10 has been described as a separate part of the articulator. It should be noted that thanks to the dowel 30 it can generally be attached to any known articulator, adapting it and attaching it to any base.
As a variation the foot 10 may be permanently incorporated on the articulator, or the articulator may be made with a built-in adjustable foot having the same function. The ability to adapt to various articulators is lost but the attachment operations rendered unnecessary. For example a screw or knob 90 acting as a foot may be applied in the base 150. The knob 90 has a thread 92 screwed into the base 150, and projects towards and contacts the plane P. Rotating the knob 90 it raises the articulator laterally so the angle between the plane P and the base 150 is adjustable (see arrows in
To increase the precision of regulation of the foot 10, it would be convenient to already know which notch 42 to block the pin 40 on (or how far to turn the knob 190).
To such purpose, a transfer bow 50 for accurately reproducing the angle β on the articulator is shown in
When the fork 54 is clenched in the patient's mouth, the key 60 is loosened and the benchmark 70 aligned with the bipupillar plane of the patient, if necessary the vertical position of the benchmark 70 being regulated in height on the pin 62. Once the relative positions of the fork 54 and the benchmark 70 have been fixed by tightening the screw 74 and the key 60, it is sufficient to read the scale of the blocks 78 indicated by the tip or wire of the rocker arm 56 (e.g. counting the notches 80). The value measured is an index of the inclination between the fork 54 and the benchmark 70, that is, in conclusion, of the angle β.
The same inclination is then reproduced on the articulator, inclining the whole by the same angle β. Preferably, the graduated scale on the blocks 78 is congruous with or the same as that made on the pin 40, so as to have a perfect correspondence: the number of notches shifted on the blocks 78 corresponds to the number of notches in relation to a zero reference point in the pin 40. By so doing the entire articulator can be inclined by the same angle as that formed by the lying-position of the plane of the fork 54 and the bipupillar plane.
The accessory 300 comprises a table or flat base plate 210 on which the articulator may be placed. The table 210 comprises raised edges 212, e.g. positioned so as to form a U, around nearly an edge of the base 210 acting so as to provide an abutment for the base of the articulator 200 and keep it in position. The edges 212 may be fixed or be adjustable in position, e.g. inserting pins in predefined holes on the base 210. Other positioning and/or blocking means between the back of the articulator 200 and the base 210 such as, for example, clamps, Velcro®, shaped male-female couplings etc., may also be used.
Positioning and/or blocking means are also present between the front of the articulator 200 and the base 210. As well as, for example, clamps, Velcro®, shaped male-female couplings etc, an abutment 260 adjustable in position may also be used. The abutment 260 is for example L-shaped, with two segments 262, 264 at right angles, so as to be able to touch two sides of the articulator base 200. The abutment 260 has a horizontal slit 270 in which there is inserted a pin 268 that can be screwed and tightened in one or more aligned holes 266 present on the edge of the base 210. The abutment 260 has a horizontal lip 272 facing towards the articulator 200 by which it rests on it.
By loosening the pin 268 the abutment 260 can be shifted along the front edge of the base 210, and once the desired position has been reached, the pin 268 is tightened by screwing to fix the position of the abutment 260 on the base 210.
One or each of the two sides of the base 210 has a small recess 220 in which a cavity is made to house rotatably a notched wheel 230, rotatable with a finger, so as to turn. The accessory 300 could however only have one wheel, so that we will describe only one side, but with two it enables inclination on its sides without turning the articulator by 180°.
The wheel 230 has a polygonal or, in any case, non-circular hole in its centre, which a complementarily-shaped head of a screw 240 is inserted in so as to slide. A plate 250 is attached to the bottom of the table 210 by two screws 252 and keeps the wheel 230 trapped in the cavity 222 but free to rotate. The plate 250 has a hole with thread, corresponding to that of the screw 240 which traverses it in the latter hole.
The accessory 300 is used as follows. The articulator 300 is placed on the base 210 abutting it against the edges 212. By rotating a wheel 230 the screw 240 is screwed into the plate 250 in one direction or the other, so that the screw 240 projects more or less from the underside of the plate 250. The variable projection of the screw 240 modifies the inclination of the corresponding side of the base 210 in relation to its support plane and, definitely, inclines the articulator 200 laterally.
“Laterally” means according to the movement shown by the dotted line in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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VR2010A000071 | Apr 2010 | IT | national |
This application is a Continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/640,970, filed on Dec. 19, 2012; application Ser. No. 13/640,970 is the National Phase of PCT International Application No. PCT/IB2011/051592 filed on Apr. 13, 2011, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(a) on Patent Application No. VR2010A000071, filed in Italy on Apr. 14, 2010, the contents of each are hereby expressly incorporated by reference into the present application.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13640970 | Dec 2012 | US |
Child | 14475339 | US |