The present invention relates generally to orthodontic bracket systems, more particularly, to orthodontic bracket systems for limited orthodontic treatment where all brackets include archwire tunnels.
Existing bracket systems involve an open faced bracket slot as the primary slot that receives an orthodontic archwire. The archwire is placed into the open faced bracket slots and some sort of tie, door or clip is used to close the slot and hold the archwire in the slot. Existing orthodontic bracket systems that include an open faced archwire slot for archwires demand that time be taken by the treating doctor to fasten/ligate/secure the archwire into each open slot using the ligature tie or self-ligating clip. Existing orthodontic bracket systems contain open faced bracket slots because most traditional orthodontic treatment involves the use of stainless steel wires that must be engaged in the open slot and then secured with a ligature tie, clip or door. Also, archwires associated with traditional comprehensive orthodontic treatment are typically rectangular or square and, therefore, the bracket slots are typically square or rectangular in shape. Time must also be taken at all adjustment visits to remove or disengage the ligature ties or self-ligating apparatuses on each bracket in the system. Time spent ligating and un-ligating the orthodontic archwires is the most time consuming part of orthodontic adjustment visits. Furthermore, because instruments (often sharp instruments) must be used to fasten/unfasten ligature ties or self-ligating clips, these procedures often involve some risk of injury to the patient or treating doctor. Another disadvantage of traditional open faced orthodontic brackets is the discomfort associated with the pressure that is needed to fasten a ligature tie or open/close a self-ligating clip/door.
Accordingly, a need exists for orthodontic brackets and systems that address the problems discussed above.
The invention relates generally to an orthodontic bracket system for molars, premolars, canines, lateral incisors and central incisors. The bracket system involves the use of brackets that are essentially the same for use on all of the teeth (slight size differences may exist depending on the type of tooth on which each bracket is placed), including the anterior teeth (generally considered the front six teeth). Orthodontic treatment typically involves the use of stainless steel archwires that are not super-elastic. The present invention involves the use of closed tubular brackets on all of the teeth. The brackets are preferably used with super-elastic archwires. The inventive bracket system is specifically designed to be used for limited and/or short term orthodontic treatment that does not require stainless steel or rectangular archwires. Super-elastic wires (e.g., nickel titanium, NiTi) are preferably used for the duration of treatment in conjunction with the tubular brackets on all of the teeth (both anterior and posterior teeth). In an embodiment of the invention, the dentist has the ability to use closed faced brackets during most of the treatment where no clip, tie or the like is used, but, if desired, later in the treatment, the dentist can open up the bracket slots and put either a round wire into a converted round open slot or a rectangular wire into a rectangular open slot.
In a preferred embodiment, the present invention provides a bracket system that involves multiple (preferably more than three) brackets within an arch that have two closed lumens. The present invention preferably provides for root torquing without the need to use rectangular wires for the root movement; rotational control and efficiency; the ability to fine-tune the facio-lingual position of the crowns of the teeth by strategic threading of the archwires; a narrowed outer lumen (narrower medio-distal width) that allows for greater ease in threading a wire through multiple adjacent brackets; and no need for ligature ties or a self-ligating apparatus on multiple adjacent anterior teeth or premolars.
In accordance with one preferred embodiment of the present invention, there is provided an orthodontic bracket that includes a main body portion having first and second tunnels extending transversely therethrough, wherein the main body portion is adapted to be bonded to the facial surface of a tooth such that the first and second tunnels extend approximately parallel to the facial surface. In a preferred embodiment, the first and second tunnels each have a circular cross-section and the main body portion includes a front portion through which the first tunnel extends and a rear portion through which the second tunnel extends and the rear portion has a larger width than the front portion.
In accordance with another preferred embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a method that includes providing a plurality of orthodontic brackets that each include a main body portion having first and second tunnels extending transversely therethrough. The main body portion is adapted to be bonded to the facial surface of a tooth such that the first and second tunnels extend approximately parallel to the facial surface. The method further includes bonding each of the plurality of brackets to separate teeth in an arch, and threading a first archwire through the first tunnel in each of the plurality of brackets.
In accordance with another preferred embodiment of the present invention, there is provided an orthodontic bracket that includes a main body portion having at least a first tunnel extending transversely therethrough, and a pair of opposing retention members extending from the main body portion. The first tunnel has a circular cross-section and the main body portion is adapted to be bonded to the facial surface of a tooth such that the first tunnel extends approximately parallel to the facial surface. In a preferred embodiment, the bracket does not include an open faced slot.
In accordance with another preferred embodiment of the present invention, there is provided an orthodontic bracket system for correcting the teeth in an arch that includes molars, premolars, canines, lateral incisors and central incisors. The system includes a plurality of brackets that each include a main body portion having at least a first tunnel extending transversely therethrough. The first tunnel has a circular cross-section and each bracket is bonded to the facial surface of a tooth in the arch. The first tunnel of each bracket extends approximately parallel to the facial surface of the tooth to which the bracket is bonded. The system also includes a first archwire extending through the first tunnels in each of the brackets. The archwire has a circular cross-section. In a preferred embodiment, none of the brackets through which the first archwire extends include an open faced slot. In another preferred embodiment, each of the brackets include a second tunnel extending transversely therethrough that extends approximately parallel to the first tunnel.
In accordance with yet another preferred embodiment of the present invention, there is provided an orthodontic bracket that includes a main body portion having first and second tunnels extending transversely therethrough. The main body portion is adapted to be bonded to the facial surface of a tooth such that the first and second tunnels extend approximately parallel to the facial surface.
In accordance with yet another preferred embodiment of the present invention, there is provided an orthodontic bracket system for correcting the teeth in an arch that includes molars, premolars, canines, lateral incisors and central incisors. The system includes a plurality of brackets that each include a main body portion having first and second tunnels extending transversely therethrough. Each bracket is bonded to the facial surface of a tooth in the arch. The first and second tunnels of each bracket extend approximately parallel to the facial surface of the tooth to which the bracket is bonded. The system further includes a first archwire extending through the first tunnels in each of the brackets.
In accordance with one preferred embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a method that includes providing a plurality of orthodontic brackets that each comprise a main body portion having at least a first tunnel extending transversely therethrough and that is adapted to be bonded to the facial surface of a tooth such that the first tunnel extends approximately parallel to the facial surface, bonding each of the plurality of brackets to separate teeth in an arch, converting the first tunnel on at least one of the brackets to an open faced slot to create a slotted bracket, providing an archwire, and inserting the archwire into the slot on the slotted bracket and then threading the archwire through the first tunnel on others of the plurality of brackets.
The invention, together with additional features and advantages thereof, may be best understood by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying illustrative drawings. In these accompanying drawings, like reference numerals designate like parts throughout the figures.
As shown in the drawings, for purposes of illustration, a preferred embodiment of an orthodontic bracket system 10 is shown and described. It will be appreciated that terms such as “front,” “back,” “top,” “bottom,” “side,” “up,” “down,” and “below” used herein are merely for ease of description and refer to the orientation of the components as shown in the figures. It will also be appreciated that certain terms such as upper and lower wings 22 and 24 and front portion 42 and rear portion 20 used herein (this is not an exhaustive list) refer to the orientation of the components when the brackets described herein are secured on the tooth of a patient. It should be understood that any orientation of the system 10, and the components thereof described herein is within the scope of the present invention.
Referring now to the drawings, wherein the illustrations are for purposes of illustrating the present invention and not for purposes of limiting the same,
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the bracket 12 includes a secondary tunnel, lumen or archwire slot 18 that runs generally parallel to the main tunnel 14. The secondary tunnel 18 is used in the same fashion as the main tunnel 14 and is approximately the same size in diameter. However, as shown in
The bracket 12 includes a base 20 that includes a plurality of mesh undercuts or dovetails 21 for retentive purposes. The number of undercuts 21 is not a limitation on the present invention. As is shown in
As is shown in
In use, because the secondary tunnels 18 are closer to the facial surfaces of the teeth, secondary or supplemental archwire 16b is typically threaded first, followed by main archwire 16a. It will be understood that the terms “main” and “secondary” are not used herein to infer that one tunnel or archwire is more important or provides more effect or influence than the other. These terms are only used to aid in the understanding of the invention.
It will be understood that the use of the second archwire 16b provides for more rotational control and efficiency as it aids the first or main archwire 16a in straightening the teeth as both archwires 16a and 16b regain their initial shape via the shape memory properties inherent in super-elastic materials. In a preferred embodiment, the archwires 16a and 16b are made of nickel titanium. However, this is not a limitation on the present invention and other shape memory alloys or materials can be used. The second tunnel 18 is essentially a “partner” that allows the treating doctor to add a second archwire 16b to the system for faster and more efficient tooth movement, e.g., rotations of teeth. It will be understood that the system 10 can be used with only one archwire 16a.
Threading the main archwire 16 through the tunnels 14 increases treating doctor efficiency, decreases the chance for patient/treating doctor injury with instruments and increases patient comfort because the forces related to ligating traditional brackets are unneeded. At adjustment visits, the wires can be removed the same way that they are inserted (threaded) which also provides for more efficiency, less chance of injury and less discomfort for the patient.
It will be understood by those skilled in the art, that in many cases or treatments of a patient (e.g., in a case where the teeth are crooked and no spaces need to be closed) nothing other than the friction of the superelastic archwires 16a and/or 16b within the tunnels 14 and/or 18 is necessary to hold the archwires 16a and/or 16b in place. However, some cases may require further aid in moving the teeth. This may be accomplished through the use of wings 22 and 24 and the spaces 23 and 25 defined between the wings 22 and 24 and the base 20. The wings 22 and 24 can be used in a number of different situations. For example, when a patient needs space between teeth closed, the treating doctor may need to use some type of elastic, such as what is called a power chain 26. All components that are used to retain the wire 16 on or in the bracket 12, including ligatures ties, power chains, clips, elastomeric rings and the like are numbered herein as 26 even though it is actually a power chain that is shown and numbered 26 in
In an exemplary embodiment, only archwires with a circular cross-section are used. Accordingly, in an exemplary procedure or treatment, brackets 12 or 27 are placed on a plurality of teeth in an arch and an archwire 16a is threaded through the main tunnel 14. Over the course of time, the teeth will move in accordance with the shape memory characteristics of the archwire 16a. After the teeth have reached the desired position, the brackets and archwire are removed. In this embodiment, during the course of treatment, square or rectangular archwires (or any archwire that affects the roots or provides torque) are never used.
As shown in
As shown in
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the bracket 40 includes a secondary tunnel, lumen or archwire slot 18 that runs generally parallel to the main tunnel 14. The secondary tunnel 18 is used in the same fashion as the main tunnel 14 and is approximately the same size in diameter. However, the tunnels 14 and 18 can have different diameters. In a preferred embodiment, the tunnels 14 and 18 include a beveled edge 14a and 18a, thus making it easier for a doctor to insert an archwire.
As shown in
The bracket 40 includes a base or rear portion 20 that includes a plurality of mesh undercuts 21a. The undercuts can be dovetails (like those described above) or can be recesses in the bottom, as shown in
It will be understood that brackets 40 are employed in system 10, in a similar manner as bracket 12 described above. As shown best in
Accordingly, the bracket system 10 provides the treating doctor with greater control over the bucco-lingual position of the teeth within a dental arch. After initial leveling and aligning of the teeth is accomplished, it is common for the treating doctor to desire changes to the bucco-lingual position of specific teeth. At any point in treatment, if the treating doctor desires that a tooth be moved facially, the treating doctor can thread the main archwire 16 through the outer lumens 14 of all the brackets 10 or 40 in the system but concurrently thread the archwire 16 through the inner lumen 18 of the tooth to be moved. In this manner, bracket 40 allows the treating doctor to essentially utilize the lumens 14 and 18 as handles to move the desired tooth facially as the archwire 16 acts. If the treating doctor intends to move a particular tooth lingually, the archwire 16 can be threaded in the opposite fashion; the wire 16 can be threaded through the inner lumen 18 for all the brackets 40 in the system 10 except for the tooth to be moved lingually can have the archwire 16 threaded through the outer lumen 14. The two lumen design therefore allows for bucco-lingual fine-tuning for every tooth within an arch including anterior and posterior teeth. It will be understood that the above treatment scenarios are exemplary and not a limitation on the present invention.
The bracket system 10 of the invention also allows for more rotational control and less friction as described in the following exemplary scenario:
As the treating doctor initiates patient treatment, he can use a standard elastic orthodontic archwire 16 and thread it through the brackets 40 in a particular dental arch. Because of the narrowed mesio-distal width of the outer lumen 14, the inter-bracket distance is maximized. This increase in inter-bracket distance allows for the initial archwire 16 to be threaded through the outer lumens 14 with minimal effort, even in cases where the teeth are severely displaced and the wire must be significantly distorted while it is threaded. In a preferred embodiment, as the treating doctor threads the archwire 16 through the outer lumens 14 of the brackets 40 in a particular dental arch, the system allows the treating doctor to thread the wire 16 through the mesio-distal lumens 14 with no need to use a metal ligature tie or an elastomeric ligature tie to hold the archwire 16 in the orthodontic slot. Ligature ties create significant friction with the archwire and dramatically slow down tooth movement as the archwire drags on the ligature ties. To overcome the friction associated with ligature ties, many orthodontic bracket designs include a self-ligating apparatus that allows the treating doctor to hold the wire into the bracket slot with a door or clip. Self-ligating designs necessitate some moving part in the bracket design and this typically leads to a significant increase in manufacturing costs. The present invention provides for minimal friction as the archwire 16 is continually held in the lumen 14 by the rigid and smooth walls of the lumen 14.
As treatment progresses, the initial archwire will work to begin leveling and aligning the teeth within the dental arch. When the teeth have achieved a certain level of straightness, and sometimes at the very beginning of treatment (depending on the severity of misalignment), the treating doctor is able to thread a second standard orthodontic archwire through the back (lingual) lumen 18. With two archwires 16a and 16b threaded through the two lumens 14 and 18, various types of tooth movement can be achieved predictably and efficiently. In a preferred embodiment, the back lumen 18 has a standard/typical mesio-distal width. In this embodiment, the back lumen 18 aids the front lumen 14 in allowing the archwires 16a and 16b to provide the desired rotational movements and control. As discussed above, the narrower (in mesio-distal width) outer lumens 14 allow for ease of archwire 16 placement when the teeth are severely misaligned. When an archwire 16 is threaded through the inner lumens 18, the wider mesio-distal width allows the treating doctor more control over rotations. Two archwires working coincidentally within two rigid and smooth lumens provides efficiency and minimizes friction as the archwires 16a and 16b slide on the walls of both lumens 14 and 18, respectively.
In a preferred embodiment, the bracket 40 also provides the treating doctor with a unique ability to torque the roots of the teeth bucco-lingually with only the use of round archwires. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, typically, rectangular bracket slots and rectangular orthodontic archwires are utilized to achieve bucco-lingual movement of the roots of the teeth. Bracket 40 provides for bucco-lingual root torque as the round wires 16 act on the lumens 14 and 18. As discussed above, the treating doctor will typically thread a round archwire 16a through the outer lumen 14 at the beginning of treatment when the teeth are significantly misaligned. After the initial round archwire 16a is threaded through the outer lumens 14 and the patient is dismissed, the archwire 16a will begin to align the crowns of the teeth in that particular dental arch. Almost all of this tooth movement involves tipping of the crowns of the teeth and little to no root movement, particularly in a bucco-lingual direction. As the teeth are aligned and the treating doctor is able to add the second round archwire 16b through the inner lumen 18, root movement can be accomplished. The initial archwire 16a that is used through the outer lumens 14 will bring the outer lumens 14 into alignment. If a particular tooth within the arch has a root that is tipped lingually or facially when compared to the other teeth within the arch, the inner lumen 18 will not be in alignment with the other inner lumens 18 after the initial archwire 16a has provided initial alignment. As the second round archwire 16c is threaded through the inner lumen 18, this archwire 16c will now work to bring the inner lumens 18 into alignment as it moves the teeth. As both wires 16a and 16b work to bring their respective lumens 14 and 18 into alignment, this allows for bucco-lingual root movement.
In a preferred embodiment, the two lumen design is primarily intended to be used on all of the teeth to be bracketed within a particular dental arch. However, this is not a limitation on the present invention. The two lumen bracket 40 can also be used in conjunction with more traditional orthodontic brackets. For example, a particular treating doctor may prefer to use existing orthodontic brackets on the incisor teeth for a variety of reasons including: a desire to use brackets that still exist in inventory, a desire to attach different color elastomeric ligature ties for an adolescent patient that has requested certain colors or a preference for a certain type of bracket to be used on certain teeth. In these cases, the two lumen design of this invention can still yield many of the same benefits including: decreased friction within the arch, the ability to fine-tune the bucco-lingual position of the crowns of certain teeth within the arch and greater ease in placing the archwire because there is no need to use ligature ties on the teeth within the arch that do have the inventive bracket thereon. The narrowed mesio-distal width of the outer lumens still allows for ease of threading the archwire through multiple adjacent brackets even though some brackets placed on teeth within a particular dental arch may not have the invention bonded to them.
Accordingly, although exemplary embodiments of the invention have been shown, and described, it is to be understood that all the terms used herein are descriptive rather than limiting, and that many changes, modifications, and substitutions may be made by one having ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/536,009, filed Aug. 5, 2009, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12536009 | Aug 2009 | US |
Child | 12849698 | US |