The treatment of dental caries in all manner of decay possibilities is done with the objective of removing undesired layers of active decay, minimizing future bacterial intrusions, and filling the excavated site with appropriate fillings. Unfortunately, dentists employing the accepted method of high-speed drilling will inevitably and consistently remove far more undamaged dentin than is desirable. Secondly, they will introduce by the very nature of drill action a layer of potential bacterial corruption called the smear zone. This is where the rotating and grinding of the drill tip ceases to dig further, leaving a rough landscape which dentists must attempt to polish away. Mechanically drilling away caries and tooth structure is a remedy to a problem, but a process found lacking in many ways.
The use of abrasive air or fluid driven methodology to resolve medical problems is centered on anatomical features undergoing gross exposure to reducing substances flung against them. Any attempt in the prior art to limit fluid bounce or splash is centered on physical barrier shields to contain rebounding discharges. It is directly due to damage to peripheral tissue that the use of pressurized fluids in dental applications is primarily used for low psi cleaning applications, rather than cavity care. A liquid jet stream brings a force of impact against dental structure that is concentrated in the center, with less proportional force the further from this center that is measured. Although capable of cleaning surfaces, this singular type of stream is not optimal for evenly wearing away dental structures in the zone hit by the fluid. Thus in these examples the outer edge of the strike zone (relative to the center) is not removed with a similar depth. With reducing elements included, the result is a curved-wall crater rather than a flat and round pill-box style excavation.
The invention is a low-splash dental fluid distribution implement with the ability to evenly wear down tooth decay, diseased tissue, or undesired dentin in oral applications with live patients. The directed multi-beams of pressurized fluid are a plurality of individual beams paired in such a manner that the reflected fluid bursts are inwardly directed against each other. This canceling effect prevents damage to the oral tissues of the patient's mouth by curtailing outward bound bursts of fluid arising from the initial directed impact. Also, the outer edges of the impact zone receive a comparable force as that which strikes the center. The dentist has adjustable control over both the intensity and distribution field of the pressurized sterile fluid, which may contain a pre-determined amount of reductive elements held in suspension. The desired result is the severe reduction in cratering, gouging, and non-symmetrical damage introduced by implements of the prior art such as drills, jet-stream fluid delivery systems, and tissue sanders with less danger of tongue and gum damage to the patient in these cases of comparison.
It is an objective of the instant invention to severely reduce the potentially harmful splashing after-effects of a pressurized beam of fluid directed against teeth.
It is another objective of the instant invention to provide a dental implement capable of delivering a plurality of circularly-moving bursts of fluid against dental structure with the objective to reduce all of said structure in an even fashion within the strike zone, such that the reduction has a diameter roughly equal to the diameter of the collective whole of the individual bursts and a uniform depth across the entire strike zone.
It is another objective of the instant invention to provide a dental implement capable of low-pressure levels below 120 psi for released fluid.
It is another objective of the instant invention to provide a dental implement that is not stifled in its ability to erode hard calcified tooth tissue.
It is another objective of the instant invention to provide a dental implement capable of significantly reducing the generation of cratering and smear zone regions as engendered by procedures to remove dental structure within a field of operation (such as encompassed by entire dental decay cavity), where the field diameter is much wider and larger than the momentary impact zone of a prior art drill or liquid jet.
It is another objective of the instant invention to provide a dental implement capable of significantly reducing the elevated patient discomfort offered by prior art drilling techniques, and reducing the need for needle-injection deadening of nerve responses to prevent or lower such patient discomfort.
The preferred instant invention is a low-splash fluid distribution implement that spins around a central axis for fluid elongation. Its discharge is unlike a single jet of water which continually drives fluid onto fluid. As a result of the spin-induced elongation effect, the paired inward-sloping beams from the instant invention continually strike substrate before splashing towards each other. An improvement is the addition of a sweep action to the discharge. Further dependent improvements to the invention include water mass reduction by both use of a solenoid valve (22) and aeration. The latter by admission of gas particles to the fluid stream at a crossing junction (24).
Means to laterally sweep the discharge end of the emitter are described using magnetic attraction and repulsion. This feature is termed lateral displacement sweeping. Other patterns can be created. For example, another magnetic field generator placed 90 degrees from the first could cross-sweep the emitter's release end in tandem with the original displacement pattern. This combined sweeping motion is termed circular displacement sweeping. Other travel patterns and sweep schemes than magnetic can be designed.
The described electric motor (14) and gear (16) used in
The instant invention can be applied to other categories within dentistry such as removing tartar, orthodontic adhesive, or old bonding layers for porcelain cap re-fittings, etc, or other fields such as veterinarian medicine.
The foregoing description of the preferred and alternate embodiments of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, as many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching without deviating from the spirit and the scope of the invention. The embodiments described are selected to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as suited to the particular purpose contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2442033 | Brantly et al. | May 1948 | A |
5800367 | Saxer et al. | Sep 1998 | A |
6164967 | Sale et al. | Dec 2000 | A |
7080980 | Klupt | Jul 2006 | B2 |
20020004188 | Beerstecher et al. | Jan 2002 | A1 |
20120141953 | Mueller | Jun 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20140342308 A1 | Nov 2014 | US |