The present invention relates generally to the field of dental accessories and more specifically to a finger-worn dental tool.
In the practice of dentistry, most dental tools, especially designed to scrap or clean teeth or gum lines, are inevitably contaminated or blocked by debris such as food, plaque, tartar, blood, gum tissue, other build up materials near the gum line, etc. Such debris collected on the tips of the dental tools often interfere the dental procedure as the tips are no longer able to pick up debris or obstruct the site of the dental practitioner. Hence, the dental practitioner frequently needs to clean the contaminated tips in the middle of a dental procedure.
To clean the tips of dental tools, typically, the dental practitioner pauses the procedure, takes hands out of the patient's mouth, finds a gauze pad or other cloth, and wipes the tips clean. Such cleaning action most likely requires both hands, thereby stops the ongoing procedure and happens frequently as the tips of dental tools are constantly contaminated by touching the gum line or teeth during the dental procedure. Such repetitive cleaning action using both hands could interrupt the dental procedure and even pose a risk of injury to the practitioner and the patient.
In similar consideration of procedural interruption and injury risks, not only dental cleaning but also dental polishing procedures need a freehand device assisting the dental practitioner. Many dental practitioners work alone with their patients especially during polishing of dental surfaces. Whenever the practitioner needs to apply a dental substance to an oral cavity such as liquid, gel, paste, etc., it is quite cumbersome and inefficient for the practitioner to hold the substance in one hand while applying it with another hand to patient's teeth and even keeping the patient's tongue and oral tissue away from the working area. Therefore, such action requires both hands as well as attention on multiple working sites, whereby distracts the practitioner and consumes valuable procedural time. Plus, those inefficient steps repetitively occur during a dental polishing procedure.
Accordingly, there is a need for a suitable solution adding efficiency on dental procedures that is multifunctional, modular, portable, self-contained, unitary, handheld, disposable, reusable and cost efficient. There are various attempts proposing handheld dental accessories enhancing efficiency of dental procedures: U.S. Pat. No. 8,584,298 to Viscomi; U.S. Pat. No. 9,474,584 to Oien; U.S. Pat. No. 6,257,888 to Barham; U.S. Pat. No. 7,014,463 to Savoia; U.S. Pat. No. 4,844,308 to Porteous; and U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2009/0126134 to Whipple.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,257,888 to Barham discloses hand and finger supported dental accessories. The invention can be handheld in two ways: adhesively anchored on the upper side of one hand or resiliently gripped on a finger. Considering most dental practitioners' wear latex or vinyl gloves, the adhesiveness likely fails to secure the invention on the hand as the gloves contract, stretch or distort during a dental procedure. Further, the invention has a tray-like holder containing an absorbent medium for cleaning dental tools and a well for receiving a pre-formed vial of polishing paste. Hence, the well is shaped to hold the vial of polishing paste, so the fixed interior volume of the well limits how much the dental substance can be taken. Likewise, the absorbent medium is pre-secured in the tray-like holder, neither removable nor replaceable. Therefore, the invention is not modular and limited to single-use.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,844,308 to Porteous discloses a finger mounted dental cup to hold dental paste and cleaning agent. Although the invention has a ring-like finger mount and a space in the form of a cup to hold dental paste and cleaning agent, it does not provide a cleaning function of a dental tool. Plus, the cup is not mounted atop of the ring-like structure. Instead, the cup is mounted to the side of the ring-like structure. Thereby, the cup may likely push the adjacent finger and interfere its movement during a dental procedure.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,584,298 to Viscomi discloses a finger mounted instrument that comprises a finger guard and a disposable form attached thereto. The form is used for cleaning a dental instrument and further impregnated with a medicament for disinfecting the dental instrument during a dental operation. However, it does not provide a separate space to hold additional dental substances (e.g., polishing paste).
U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2009/0126134 to Whipple discloses a ring-like receptacle where a grooved or cut sponge is positioned, wherein the sponge is impregnated with an antibacterial solution and used for cleaning a dental tool. The invention is limited to use for cleaning a dental tool, not to serve multiple functions. In addition, the cleaning occurs at one place (i.e., the sponge) and does not provide a separate space to hold additional substances (e.g., polishing paste).
U.S. Pat. No. 7,014,463 to Savoia discloses a dental hygiene accessory for cleaning a dental instrument. It has a ring-like retainer, a disk-like platform, bristles upstanding from a central area thereof, and an annular body of a soft dental debris surrounding the bristles. The disk-like platform is supported by the retainer enclosing a finger. The bristles and the soft dental debris are used for cleaning dental tools. However, the invention is limited to use for cleaning a dental tool and not reusable.
U.S. Pat. No. 9,474,584 to Oien discloses a dental instrument servicing system provided with a holder and a cushion. The invention serves multipurpose such as receiving, retaining, storing, and cleaning various dental instruments during a dental procedure. However, it is different from the present invention since the dental instrument servicing system is not supported by a finger and has a substantially different configuration.
None of the aforementioned attempts, taken either singly or in combination, do not suggest the present invention as claimed in this patent application. Therefore, there is a need to have a handheld device for cleaning dental tools and receiving and holding dental substances, which is disposable, adjustable, reusable, modular, compact, self-contained, cost efficient, and portable, while efficiently performing multiple and necessary functions.
For improving issues aforementioned, the present invention (herein, the present invention and the freehand ring are interchangeable) discloses a finger mounted device for multifunctional use during a dental procedure. The present invention mainly comprises: a discontinuous ring 110 gripping a finger and a platform 140 provided with an upstanding sidewall 146 and bosses 148A/B and at least one recessed compartment 150A/B, wherein the ring 110 and the platform 140 are formed in a continuous structure. The continuous structure may be reusable after sterilization. Further, the device is modular as the platform 140 may engage and disengage with different types of inserts such as a form insert 200 and a deep well insert 300. Depending on the use, either the form insert 200 or the deep well insert 300 is removably attached atop of the platform 140. The form insert 200 is disposable and replaceable and serves a cleaning surface to wipe a dental tool. The deep well insert 300 enables the device to hold more volume of gel or liquid.
These and other embodiments are described further below with reference to the figures.
To facilitate understanding, the same reference numerals have been used, where possible, to designate common components presented in the figures. The drawings are depicted schematically and not to scale. Various embodiments can readily be understood by considering the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
A detailed description of various embodiments is provided below along with accompanying figures. The detailed description is provided in conjunction with such embodiments, but is not limited to such examples. It is envisioned that a person skilled in the art will appreciate other possible configurations of the present invention, and that any such work around will fall under the scope of the present invention.
Referring to nonexclusive examples,
Referring to
Further, the continuous construction of the ring 110 and the platform 140 may comprise compliant resin materials such as Dupont Zytel FG101L NC010, Dupont Zytel FG151L NC010, or Dupont Crastin FGS600F040 NC010. Therein, chemical, chill, or heat sterilization may be applicable to the device 100, so the device 100 is reusable. Such monolithic construction may be smoothed with general curves for aesthetic and comfort reasons. The device 100 in
In another embodiment in
Further, the form insert 200 is a deformable material and serves a cleaning surface for wiping contaminated dental tools. The form insert 200 may contain disinfecting substances for additional cleaning power. The shape of the form insert 200 is generally flat and corresponds with the outer edge of the front surface 142. The form insert 200 may be disposable and replaceable with new one for each use. To facilitate the removal of the form insert 200, the compartment 150A/B of the device 100 may include at least one recess-lip 158 along the inner wall 156 for easy gripping of the form insert 200 as shown in
In yet another embodiment as shown in
The deep well insert 300 may comprise a single rigid layer of non-toxic compliant materials. Even chemical, chill, or heat sterilization may be applicable to the deep well insert 300 for reusability. Depending on the exterior shape of the platform 140, the deep well insert 300 may have more than one well 314A/B. Therein, multiple wells may be prefilled with various types of polishing pastes.
The method of using the device 100 may be achieved by performing the following steps: (a) providing at least one freehand ring 100; (b) placing the ring 110 on the finger so that the band 112 grips the finger and remain in place thereon; (c) adding gel or liquid type dental substances into the compartment 150A/B; (d) taking the substance therefrom using another hand not wearing the ring 110; and (e) sterilizing the freehand ring 100 to reuse next time.
The method of using the device 100 and the form insert 200 may be achieved by performing the following steps: (a) providing at least one freehand ring 100; (b) placing the ring 110 on the finger so that the band 112 grips the finger and remains in place thereon; (c) attaching the form insert 200 atop of the front surface 142; (d) wiping a contaminated dental tool on the from insert 200 as needed; (e) pinching the form insert 200 near the recess-lip 158 after use; and (f) removing the form insert 200.
The method of using the device 100 and the deep well insert 300 may be achieved by performing the following steps: (a) providing at least one freehand ring 100; (b) placing the ring 110 on the finger so that the band 112 grips the finger and remains in place thereon; (c) attaching the deep well insert 300 atop of the front surface 142; (d) adding gel or liquid dental substances into the well 314A/B; and (f) taking the substance therefrom using another hand not wearing the ring 110.
Although the foregoing examples describe some details of the present invention for purposes of clarity of understanding, the invention is not limited to the details provided. There are many alternative ways of implementing the invention. The disclosed examples are illustrative and not restrictive. Therefore, a numerous modifications or changes can be made to the invention but still within the scope of the invention as set forth in the claims.
This application claims priority from U.S. provisional patent application No. 62/488,682 filed Apr. 21, 2017, and hereby incorporates subject matters of the provisional application in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62488682 | Apr 2017 | US |