The present invention relates to an integrated dental care apparatus which comprises at least a patient chair and a dental care unit and to which is structurally connected at least one of the following: a spittoon arrangement comprising a water tap and possibly a cup stand, an arm for dentist's instruments, an arm for an assistant's instrument unit, an arm connected to a suction system of the integrated dental care apparatus, an arm for a display screen, an arm for an operation lamp, an arm for a tray, an arm for some other device or implement used in a dental care environment, a connector structure for any device or implement used in a dental care environment, whether mentioned above or not.
In prior art, dental care units have been implemented as different constructions for different cultures amongst dentists, among other things. The dental care unit in itself is an apparatus used in connection with dental work, one essential and traditional function of which is to properly supply the dental instruments used by the dentist with the physical quantities required for their operation, such as operating power (e.g. electricity or pneumatic air) and/or water. In this context, and as evident to any person involved with dentistry, by the term dental care unit is thus meant a physical entity having a cover enclosing means for such a supply function at least. In connection with dental work, it is often also necessary to use instruments for removing blood, spit, tartar pieces etc. from the patient's mouth by suction. To allow the instruments to be kept at hand, the dental care unit is typically provided with various holders and/or arms. The dental care unit may even have several arms attached to it, for facilities such as an operating light and today e.g. a display screen. In some solutions, the patient chair is also integrated with the dental care unit to form a single apparatus. To be able to serve clients in regions differing in respect of the culture of dental care and also to respond to dentists' individual needs and practices regarding e.g. the way in which the dentist wishes the instruments to be available in connection with a dental care operation, manufacturers may have to keep numerous different apparatus versions in production.
One solution to reduce the number of different versions is to realize the apparatus as enabling realization of different configurations in order that the same basic construction can be utilized to meet at least two different client needs. As dental care units generally require connections for e.g. pneumatic air, suction and drainage, and often also for an incoming water network and electricity, such connections are typically built in the treatment room as permanent fittings by providing the required lines and connections in connection with this permanent installation.
A special category among dentists is the left-handed dentists. Particularly as dentists today typically work from one side of the patient lowered to a lying position, it is typically more natural for a left-handed dentist to work from a different side of the patient than the right-handed dentist prefers.
The prior art includes integrated dental care apparatuses implemented as allowing shifting even between the left/right-handed working. There is e.g. a prior-art arrangement in which the patient chair is fixed to the floor and the lines required for the instruments and other devices intended to be used via the dental care unit are passed thereto through the structures of the patient chair, and in which the dental care unit is connected to the chair by mounting it at an end of an arm part, which is arranged turnable with respect to a vertical axis so that the dental care unit can be turned from a first side of the patient chair to its second side. Although these arrangements do improve the situation in view of use of the apparatus from either side of the patient chair, yet the outcome of this solution as such is not symmetry in view of all conceivable parts of the integrated dental care apparatus.
On the other hand, the construction as described above comprises a basic structure wherein the patient chair is mounted on the floor. In many dentists' opinion, however, absolutely more ergonomic are integrated dental care apparatuses in which the patient chair is not fixed to the floor but in which the chair raising mechanism is arranged e.g. in connection with the dental care unit. A possibility provided by a basic structure like this is that the patient chair can be implemented as a relatively thin structure, making it possible to provide under the chair a space sufficient to allow the dentist to work in a sitting position even with his/her knees under the patient chair. Integration of patient chair and dental care unit provides a possibility to reduce the number of components needed in the apparatus.
Further, in addition to the patient chair, the dental care unit or the apparatus formed thereof often being arranged in the dental treatment room as a permanent installation, the dental treatment space is typically also provided with other fixed structures, such as shelves or e.g. a dental x-ray device mounted on a wall. Typically, the permanently installed solutions do not provide much possibilities for e.g. changing the patient's position on the treatment chair relative to the fixed structures in the treatment space, any more than for e.g. changing the dentist's or assistant's working location relative to these structures, or relative to other structures that may be comprised in the integrated dental care apparatus. Even more broadly speaking, considering many integrated dental care apparatuses in which several functionalities are integrated in the same construction, in many cases placement of different parts of the apparatus and the possibilities of adjusting their position leave room for improvement e.g. from the point of view of ergonomic working and the special requirements imposed by variable practice spaces.
The object of the current invention is to provide a new concept for an integrated dental care apparatus, a concept which in itself and in its preferred embodiments enhances variability of the apparatus to meet different needs of different dental treatment rooms, especially in a way that permits better attendance to dentists' individual needs. The aim is still to retain the basic construction known in itself, wherein the patient chair is not arranged to be mounted on the floor but wherein it is arranged to be supported by other structures of an integrated dental care apparatus. A specific objective is additionally to enable the construction to be implemented in a manner that allows the apparatus to be arranged to be symmetric, preferably in respect of all its parts and properties visible to the user, so that all parts of the apparatus can be positioned in the same way on either side of the patient chair, and that the instruments and other devices connectable to it can be used in the same way from either side of the patient chair.
In the following, these and some other objectives of the invention and some of its preferred embodiments will be described in greater detail by also referring to the attached drawings, wherein
In
The rotation of the patient chair 20 relative to the dental care unit 10 can be implemented by a motorized technique. According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the apparatus is provided with an arrangement enabling these two parts to be turned independently of each other, i.e. e.g. so that one of them is stationary while the other is moving. On the other hand, it is possible to provide e.g. the control system of the apparatus and its user interface with various automated functions for bringing the parts of the apparatus into given desired positions relative to each other. In addition to the parts already discussed, the above may also be arranged to apply to other parts that may be included in the apparatus. According to one preferable embodiment, the means for enabling the dental care unit 10 to be turned relative to a vertical axis 101, 102 are arranged substantially in connection with the means for mounting the dental care unit 10 on the floor. On the other hand, the means for enabling the patient chair 20 to be turned relative to a vertical axis 101, 102 may be arranged in connection with the means 21 for supporting the patient chair 20.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the actual dental care unit 10 is not arranged to be turnable at the end of a supporting arm 11 at a distance from the vertical axis 101 as in
In
According to the invention, the dental care unit 10 can in principle be arranged to turn around the patient chair 20 by the side of the footrest 22 of the chair 20 as well, e.g. by arranging the footrest. 22 to be turnable into a vertical position. However, the first-mentioned alternative enables a functionality wherein the patient is in a sitting position for consultation (
In the above description, the dental care unit 10 and the patient chair 20 comprised in the integrated dental care apparatus have been considered, but besides a work post for the dentist, many modern integrated dental care apparatuses additionally comprise a work post for an assistant, which is typically located on the other side of the patient chair 20 relative to the dentist's work post—i.e. typically on that side of the patient chair 20 where the dental care unit 10 is located. In practice, the assistant's work post may consist of e.g. an instrument stand or unit separate from the dentist's instrument table and attached to the dental care unit e.g. via a hinged arm structure. The assistant's instrument stand or unit is typically arranged to be secured to an arm system allowing the instruments to be reached from the assistant's work post as well as from the dentist's work post—either by enabling the instrument stand or unit to be turned to the other side of the patient chair 20 by passing it under the patient chair 20, or by enabling reaching the stand over the patient chair 20. For example, the suction system of a dental care unit is often arranged at the assistant's work post.
The arrangements presented in
Thus, according to one, preferred embodiment of the invention, the instrument holder 62 forming an essential part of the assistant's work post is also arranged in connection with the dental care unit 10 in such manner that, when right-handed placement of the parts of the integrated dental care apparatus is changed to left-handed placement, the assistant's unit 61 including the instrument holder 62 can be turned into a corresponding position relative to the dental care unit 10 and the patient chair 20. According to a preferred embodiment, this is implemented firstly by using an arrangement where the assistant's unit 61 is mounted on an arm 60 extending substantially vertically to the dental care unit 10 from below the dental care unit 10, said arm 60 being turnable at its base relative to a vertical axis 160, so that the assistant's unit 61, too, is mounted on this arm 60 to allow the assistant's unit 61 to be turned in relation to a second vertical axis 161. Further, if the assistant's unit 61 is provided with an adjustably placeable instrument holder 62, then the position of the latter also has to be arranged to permit the holder 62 to be symmetrically placed relative to the assistant's unit 61. In addition to the right-left-handed property, such an arrangement also provides versatile possibilities for positioning the instrument holder 62 in connection with the assistant's work post itself. In
To enable the dentist's work post to be made identical on either side of the patient chair 20, it is necessary to consider, besides the patient chair 20 and the dental care unit 10, also other parts that may be included in the integrated dental care apparatus. For example, typically a spittoon arrangement 12 with a water tap and a cup stand is arranged in connection with the dental care unit 10 (
Further, a modern integrated dental care apparatus typically also comprises at least one, often at least two arm structures 40, 50 attached to the dental care unit 10 to accommodate auxiliary equipment, such as an operating light 51 and e.g. instruments to be positioned on the instrument table 41 for use in dental work (
Arms like those described above are typically attached to a column 30 extending vertically from the dental care unit 10. On the other hand, as not shown in the attached figures, especially an arm carrying an instrument table can also be arranged to be attached to the pedestal of the dental care unit 10, either to its immovable part fixedly mounted on the floor or to the part above it, i.e. to the part of the dental care unit 10 located under the patient chair 20 and turnable in relation to the aforesaid vertical axis 101.
According to one preferred embodiment of the invention, this kind of arm systems, especially the arm system 40 for instruments, are so implemented that the arm system can be positioned symmetrically relative to the patient chair 20 irrespective of on which side of the patient chair 20 the dental care unit 10 is located. For example, in the embodiment presented in
The instrument table 41 or equivalent of the integrated dental care apparatus is typically arranged to hold several different instruments requiring different operating quantities. To allow instruments to be placed in a desired order on the instrument table 41, a solution known as such is to arrange at least some of the instrument places to be universal. According to one preferred embodiment of the invention, in order to enable the typical dental instruments to be arranged in a corresponding order irrespective of whether the instrument table 41 is positioned for right- or left-handed use, all the instrument places are arranged to be universal.
Correspondingly to what was said above regarding the instrument places of the instrument table 41, the assistant's work post, including the instrument holder 62 and instrument places used therein, is likewise preferably implemented so as to allow at least some of the instruments to be placed in the same way from the point of view of the user of the apparatus in both right-handed and left-handed situations.
Thus, according to a preferred embodiment of the invention, at least all those parts of the integrated dental care apparatus which are visible to the dentist and/or dental assistant are arranged to be positioned and used in such manner that the treatment work post can be arranged to be symmetrically identical on either side of the patient chair 20. One way of describing the invention is thus to define it as comprising an integrated dental care apparatus in which a patient chair 20 and a dental care unit 10 are arranged to be substantially symmetrical and the patient chair 20 is arranged to be turnable relative to the dental care unit 10 about an axis 101, 102 arranged in the plane of symmetry of the dental care unit 10, and in which preferably also the other parts of the apparatus, such as the structures supporting the dentist's and assistant's instruments, the operating light etc., are arranged to be turnable relative to an axis arranged in the plane of symmetry of the dental care unit 10.
The integrated dental care apparatus of the invention can also be described as comprising a patient chair 20 and a dental care unit 10, in which apparatus at least one of the following is structurally connected to the dental care unit: a spittoon arrangement 12, an arm 40 for dentist's instruments, an arm 60 for assistant's instruments and/or for a suctions system of the integrated dental care apparatus, an arm for a display screen, an arm 50 for a light 51, an arm arranged for some other device used in a dental care environment, a connector structure for any device used in a dental care environment, whether mentioned above or not, and in which the integrated dental care apparatus is arranged to comprise means for mounting it on a floor and the dental care unit 10 and patient chair 20 are structurally connected by means supporting the patient chair 20 at least. Further, the apparatus may be implemented by arranging said dental care unit 10 to be symmetrical at least as far as the external parts visible to the dental treatment site are concerned, to form at least one vertical plane of symmetry, with which plane of symmetry being arranged to unite at least the axis 101, 102 relative to which the arm 40, 60 for assistant's instruments and/or dentist's instruments is arranged to be turnable, and further said patient chair 20 being arranged to be symmetrical at least as far as its external parts are concerned to form at least one vertical plane of symmetry, with which plane of symmetry the axis 101, 102 relative to which said dental care unit 10 has been arranged to be turnable is arranged to unite.
Further, the apparatus of the invention may comprise an assistant's unit 61 arranged to comprise at least one plane of symmetry at least in respect of its external parts, which unit 61 is located in connection with the aforesaid arm 60 for assistant's instruments and comprises at least one instrument holder 62 provided for said assistant's instruments, the position of said instrument holder 62 being arranged to be adjustable relative to an axis 161 uniting with at least one of the aforesaid at least one plane of symmetry. The apparatus may also comprise one, two or more substantially horizontally extending arm structures 40, 50, 60 which are arranged to support instruments or devices used in connection with dental care work and which are arranged to comprise at least one such articulated shaft which unite with the aforesaid plane of symmetry of the dental care unit 10. The dental care unit 10 may also comprise a spittoon arrangement 12 which itself or at least some of the components comprised in it is/are arranged to be adjustable in position so that it or they is/are turnable relative to an axis uniting with the aforesaid plane of symmetry of the dental care unit 10.
The invention and its various embodiments make it possible, among other things, to implement a common dental practice for a right-handed and a left-handed dentist using the same integrated dental care apparatus. Further, in the case of possible resale of the apparatus or practice, the invention makes it irrelevant to consider whether the previous and future users of the apparatus are of the same or different handedness. The movements of the parts of the apparatus can be arranged to be motorized or manual as desirable, e.g. according to how frequently each re-positioning of the parts of the apparatus is likely to be done at the practice.
One preferred embodiment of the invention comprises a possibility to turn the patient chair 20 through 180 degrees (at least) with respect to the dental care unit 10. When this is combined with that preferred embodiment of the invention wherein the vertical axes 101, 102 relative to which the patient chair 20 and the dental care unit 10 are arranged to be turnable lie at a distance from one other, the apparatus makes it possible to achieve versatile and completely new kinds of possibilities for placement of parts of an integrated dental care apparatus in which the patient chair 20 and the dental care unit 10 are integrated to a single assembly. For example,
Regarding the invention and its preferred embodiments, it is further worth mentioning that, as the various objects and cupboards in the treatment room are typically located in predetermined places, the invention provides the possibility that, when the dentist is working alone/with an assistant, the position of the patient chair 20 can be changed somewhat so that when working alone the dentist is able to reach the cupboards on the assistant's side—whereas when an assistant is present, the assistant serves the dentist from his/her own side and extends articles from that side to the dentist.
Furthermore, the invention makes it possible to optimize the assistant's working space by moving the dental care unit 10 as far from the assistant as possible and, on the other hand, to move it closer e.g. when the patient needs to reach to the spittoon 12. The dental care unit 10 can also be brought closer to the patient chair 20 when the assistant leaves the work post to attend to other tasks, and thus the dentist is better able to reach e.g. to the spittoon 12, a cup and the instruments placed on the assistant's instrument holder 62.
An essential feature of the preferred embodiments of the invention is that the axes of rotation of rotatable parts of the apparatus are arranged in an appropriate manner in the plane of symmetry of at least one other part of the apparatus, and it is possible to provide several separate planes of symmetry in the apparatus.
The instrument table or holder used in the integrated dental care apparatus may comprise at least two such instrument connection places, arranged especially in the corners of the instrument table, whereto a spray instrument can be placed symmetrically. The apparatus of the invention may also comprise symmetrically arranged connection places e.g. for a display screen or graphic user interface.
In one preferred embodiment, the horizontal dimension of the means 21 for supporting the patient chair 20 is substantially of the same order of magnitude as the horizontal dimension of the horizontally extending part 11 of the support structure for the dental care unit 10. In such context, a preferable distance between the vertical axes 101, 102 relative to which the patient chair 20 and the dental care unit 10 are arranged turnable is of the order of 200 mm or less.
Yet further embodiments of the invention are evident to a man skilled in the art within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20061024 | Nov 2006 | FI | national |
20061029 | Nov 2006 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/062566 | 11/20/2007 | WO | 00 | 12/10/2009 |