Traditional fixed orthodontic appliances utilize brackets affixed to the teeth of a patient, and wires engaged by slots in the brackets exert force on the teeth to move at least one tooth from a first maloccluded position into a desired finished position. In the initial phases of a treatment, where a significant amount of tooth movement can be required, the amount and direction of the force applied to the teeth can be set by positioning the brackets on the labial or lingual surfaces of the teeth and inserting superelastic wires into the slots in the brackets to deliver relatively continuous movement forces.
While brackets and wires are very effective to provide a wide variety of tooth movements, for aesthetic reasons patients often prefer aligner trays that can be placed over the teeth. The aligner trays can be made of clear materials that are less visible during treatment, and the trays can be inserted in or removed from the mouth when desired. The aligner trays utilize the resilient properties of the polymeric material and the precisely shaped tooth-retaining cavities to reposition teeth, and each aligner tray in a series of aligner trays can be used to gradually move the teeth relatively small distances compared to the movements possible with brackets and wires. Aligner trays are also limited mechanically to certain tooth movements, and as such do not have the versatility of brackets and wires, particularly in the early stages of treatment where larger ranges of tooth movement may be required. For the first phase of an orthodontic treatment, a larger number of aligner stages may be necessary to resolve the worst malocclusions. Smaller tooth movements per stage, and more precisely defined tooth repositioning make aligner trays particularly well suited for finishing the final phases of an orthodontic treatment.
In general, the present disclosure is directed to an orthodontic treatment system and method that utilizes an initial wire-driven treatment phase in which attachments are affixed to the teeth. The attachments include a bonding portion bonded to a labial or a lingual surface of a tooth, as well as a wire-retaining region configured to retain an archwire such as a resilient wire to provide larger and more complex tooth movements that may be required to efficiently complete an initial treatment phase in which teeth are moved from an initial position to a second position. The initial treatment phase is followed by a subsequent or final aligner treatment phase in which the archwire is removed from the attachments and a series of aligner trays are applied over the teeth to move at least one tooth from the second position to a third position. The aligner trays include a plurality of cavities precisely shaped to receive and resiliently position teeth, and further incorporate an arrangement of indentations or notches configured to releasably engage an engagement region on an exposed surface of the attachments. In some cases, the smaller tooth movements and more precisely defined tooth repositioning make aligner trays particularly well suited for finishing the final phases of an orthodontic treatment. In some embodiments, the attachments may optionally be re-used for an additional wire-driven phase following the aligner phase, or may be removed from the teeth so that a second set of aligner trays can be employed to fine-tune or maintain the alignment of one or more teeth.
The system and method of the present disclosure utilizes two different tooth alignment tools with different capabilities and strengths, which can potentially provide faster and more aesthetic orthodontic treatments. The same attachments bonded to the teeth are used for both the wire-driven phase and the aligner phases of the treatment. In the wire-driven phase the attachments receive the resilient wires, and in the aligner phase the attachments engage the aligner trays to facilitate a wider range of tooth movements than possible with aligner trays alone.
In one aspect, the present disclosure is directed to a method for repositioning a first maloccluded tooth of a patient. The method includes a wire driven phase, including: providing a plurality of attachments, each attachment having a wire-retaining region and an engagement region, wherein the engagement region has a shoulder configured to releasably engage a corresponding indentation in an aligner tray; bonding each attachment in the plurality of attachments to a tooth of the patient; and inserting an archwire in to the wire-retaining regions in the attachments to move the first malaccluded tooth from a first position to a second position different from the first position. An aligner phase follows the wire driven phase, the aligner phase including: removing the archwire from the wire-retaining regions in the plurality of attachments, and applying an aligner tray over the teeth of the patient, wherein the aligner tray includes a plurality of cavities shaped to receive and resiliently position the first maloccluded tooth from the second position to a third position different from the second position. The aligner tray further includes an arrangement of indentations configured to releasably engage at least a portion of the engagement regions on the attachments.
In another aspect, the present disclosure is directed to an orthodontic treatment system, including: a plurality of attachments, each attachment including a body with a first end having bonding portion configured to be bonded to a surface of a tooth of a patient; and a second end opposite the first end, wherein the second end includes a catch configured to retain an archwire, and wherein an external surface of the catch has an engagement region with a shoulder; a plurality of archwires insertable into the wire retaining hooks in the attachments; and at least one aligner tray, each aligner tray including a plurality of cavities shaped to receive and resiliently position at least one tooth of the patient, the aligner tray further including at least one indentation configured to releasably engage with the shoulder in the engagement region of at least one attachment in the plurality of attachments.
In another aspect, the present disclosure is directed to an orthodontic treatment system, including: a computer with instructions that, when executed, cause the computer to receive an initial position of at least one tooth of a patient in a treatment plan, receive a final position of the at least one tooth in the treatment plan, and determine a movement geometry including movement of the at least one tooth between the initial position and the final position, the treatment plan including; a wire-driven phase, including: bonding a plurality of attachments to at least a first portion of the teeth of the patient, each attachment in the plurality of attachments including a body with a first end having a bonding portion configured to be bonded to a surface of a tooth; and a second end opposite the first end, wherein the second end includes a wire-retaining region and an engagement region with a shoulder and an undercut region configured to releasably engage a corresponding indentation in an aligner tray; inserting an archwire into the wire-retaining regions in the attachments to move at least one tooth in the first portion of teeth from the initial position to a second position different from the initial position; and an aligner phase following the wire driven phase, the aligner phase including: removing the archwire from the wire-retaining regions in the plurality of attachments, and applying an aligner tray over at least a portion of the teeth of the patient, wherein the aligner tray includes a plurality of cavities shaped to receive and resiliently position at least one tooth in the first portion of teeth of the patient according to the treatment plan from the second position to a third position different from the second position, the aligner tray further including an arrangement of indentations configured to releasably engage at least a portion of the shoulders and undercut regions in the engagement regions of the attachments.
In another aspect, the present disclosure is directed to an attachment device for an orthodontic treatment, the device including: a body having: a first end including a bonding portion configured to be bonded to a surface of a tooth; and a second end opposite the first end, wherein the second end includes a wire-retaining groove and an external surface including an engagement region, wherein the engagement region has a shoulder configured to releasably engage a corresponding indentation in an aligner tray.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like symbols in the drawings indicate like elements.
Referring now to
The body 12 further includes a second end 21 with a groove 26 having an internal surface 24 configured to retain an archwire (not shown in
In some embodiments, the body 12 includes a catch 22 that can be used to securely retain an archwire in the groove 26, and in some embodiments the catch 22 may be deflected to allow insertion or removal of the archwire from the groove 26. The catch 22 includes an optional flap-like retaining region 28 that extends toward the first end 13 of the body 12 and at least partially overlies the groove 26 to further enhance retention of the archwire in the groove 26.
In some embodiments, the body 12 of the attachment article 10 further includes an optional spacer portion 30 extending away from the bonding portion 14 and shaped to extend the groove 26 a predetermined distance from the tooth surface 16. In some embodiments, the shape and dimensions of the spacer portion 30 are configured to enable wire insertion and maintain retention of the archwire after the archwire is inserted into the groove 26. However, in some cases, as shown in more detail below, the body 12 can be designed with a minimal spacer portion 30, or even no spacer portion 30, so that the archwire can reside closer to or against the surface 16 of the tooth 20. In addition, in some examples the body 12 can include a support region 32 underlying catch 22 and the groove 26, wherein the support region 32 has an external surface configured to rest against or engage an aligner tray (not shown in
The catch 22 of the attachment article 10 includes an exposed external engagement surface 40 distal the tooth surface 16 and the bonding portion 14 configured to releasably engage an appropriately shaped indentation in an aligner tray (not shown in
In various embodiments, the attachment article 10 is made from a metal, a ceramic, a polymeric material, and the like. In some examples, all or a portion of the article 10 may be directly three-dimensionally (3D) printed using SLM, SLA or DLP vat printing or precision binder jetting from a polymeric material, a polymeric-metal composite, or a polymeric-ceramic composite, or 3 or 5 axis milled from any of these materials. In some embodiments, the polymeric material, metal, ceramic, or composite thereof has relatively elastic properties so that the catch 22 can bend and flex to facilitate introduction of the archwire and move back into place once the archwire is seated in the groove 26. However, the material used to form the attachment article 10 does not require elasticity, and the flexibility of the archwire itself may be sufficient to allow insertion and retention or self-ligation.
The bonding portion 14 of the attachment article 10 may have any suitable shape and size depending on the intended application of the attachment article 10, and may be made larger or smaller as necessary to facilitate secure attachment to the surface 16 of the tooth 20. The attachment article 10 may be bonded to the surface 16 of the tooth 20 using any suitable orthodontic adhesive, and examples include, but are not limited to epoxy, (meth)acylate-based adhesives, and the like, wherein (meth)acrylate includes acrylates and methacrylates. In some examples, the body 12 of the attachment article may include a limited selection of basic, mass-produced standardized designs, and the bonding portion 14 may be individually configured to fit a particular tooth by a process such as, for example milling, laser machining, 3D printing, and the like, directly onto the standardized body 12.
Referring now to
The catch 122 includes an exposed external engagement surface 140 distal of the tooth surface 116 and the bonding portion 114. The engagement surface 140 is configured such that at least a portion of the engagement surface 140 releasably engages an appropriately shaped indentation in a polymeric aligner tray (not shown in
Referring now to the construction 200 in
An aligner tray 250 includes a cavity 254 shaped to fit over a crown 256 of the tooth 220 and engage the opposed surfaces 216, 217 of the tooth 220. The aligner tray further includes a wall 251 including an indentation (i.e., receptacle) 252 shaped to extend away from the surface 216 of the tooth 220 and releasably engage at least a portion of an exposed external engagement surface 240 of the attachment article 210.
In various embodiments, the aligner tray 250 may be made from a wide variety of materials including metals, ceramics, polymers, and mixtures and combinations thereof. The aligner tray 250 may be formed using a wide variety of techniques including, but not limited to, molding, 3D printing, thermoforming, laser patterning, microreplication, and the like. Suitable materials and methods for making aligner trays are explored, for example, in co-owned U.S. Application 63/091,113, filed Oct. 13, 2020.
In one embodiment, a suitable configuration of tooth (or teeth)-retaining cavities are formed in a substantially flat sheet of a single layer of a polymeric film, or a multilayered polymeric film that includes multiple layers of polymeric material. In some embodiments, the polymeric film may be formed in a dispersion and cast into a film, or applied on a mold with tooth-receiving cavities. In some embodiments, the polymeric film may be prepared by extrusion of polymeric layer materials through an appropriate die to form the film. In some embodiments, a reactive extrusion process may be used in which one or more polymeric reaction products are loaded into the extruder to form one or more layers during the extrusion procedure. In yet other embodiments, the polymeric film may be deposited onto a mold via chemical vapor deposition, as described in U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/736,774, filed Sep. 26, 2019, and entitled “Parylene Dental Articles.”.
In some embodiments, the polymeric film may later be thermoformed into a dental appliance with tooth-retaining cavities, injected into a mold including tooth-retaining cavities, or produced using a three-dimensional (3D) printing process. The tooth-retaining cavities may be formed by any suitable technique, including thermoforming, laser processing, chemical or physical etching, and combinations thereof, but thermoforming has been found to provide good results and excellent efficiency. In some embodiments, the polymeric film is heated prior to forming the tooth-retaining cavities, or a surface thereof may optionally be chemically treated such as, for example, by etching, or mechanically embossed by contacting the surface with a tool, prior to or after forming the cavities.
The polymeric film, the formed dental appliance, or both, may optionally be crosslinked with radiation chosen from electron beam, gamma, UV, and mixtures and combinations thereof.
At least a portion of the engagement surface 240 on the attachment article 210 is configured to releasably engage the indentation 252, and includes a rounded shoulder 242, a planar portion 244 that is generally parallel to the bonding portion 214, and an undercut region 246. In the embodiment of
In another embodiment shown in
A polymeric aligner tray 350 includes a cavity 354 shaped to fit over a crown 356 of the tooth 320 and engage the opposed surfaces 316, 317 of the tooth 320. The polymeric aligner tray further includes a wall 351 including a protruding indentation 352 shaped to releasably engage an exposed external engagement surface 340 of the attachment article 310.
At least a portion of the engagement surface 340 is configured to releasably engage the indentation 352, and includes a rounded shoulder 342, a planar portion 344 generally parallel to the bonding portion 314, and an undercut region 346. In the embodiment of
The attachment devices and polymeric aligner trays shown in
The method further includes an aligner phase, which in various embodiments may be implemented prior to or after the wire driven phase. In the aligner phase the archwire not present in the wire retaining regions of the attachments, and an aligner tray is utilized to further reposition teeth of the patient. The aligner tray includes a plurality of cavities shaped to receive and resiliently position at least one tooth in the first portion of teeth of the patient from the second position to a third position different from the second position. The aligner tray further includes an arrangement of indentations configured to releasably engage at least a portion of the engagement regions on the attachments.
In some embodiments, the method further includes a second wire-driven phase following the aligner phase. The second wire-driven phase utilizes the attachments that are bonded to the teeth, and may utilize the same or a different archwire to efficiently move the teeth from the third position to a fourth position.
In some embodiments, the attachments may be removed following the aligner phase, and an aligner tray may be used without the attachments to move the teeth from the third position to a fourth position and provide a finer finishing adjustment to the teeth.
In some embodiments, the method includes an initial aligner phase followed by a wire-driven phase. The subsequent wire-driven phase can be followed by one or more aligner or wire-driven phases.
Dividing the course of orthodontic treatment into at least two distinct phases can have a number of advantages. In particular, crowded cases suffer from interproximal interferences between the teeth which can impede tooth movements. For aligner trays to be effective, accurate 3D scan data should be used to create realistic models of the teeth. The most difficult regions of the teeth to model accurately are the interproximals, which are coincidentally the regions where interferences are most likely to occur. Intraoral scanners can have difficulty imaging these areas, and physical impression material can fail to penetrate the thinnest regions between the teeth. Triangular meshing software can fail to properly identify surfaces in the interproximals due to points in neighboring teeth being confused with points in the tooth of interest. Interproximal mesh data may be removed and regenerated according to parametric models in subsequent processing steps. Interproximal data used to predict where teeth should intersect during staged tooth movements may be slightly erroneous, and thus the prescribed movements may be mechanically impeded, if not impossible, due to tooth collisions resulting in excessive friction or blockage. Because polymeric aligner trays prescribe very definite tooth movements, leaving no degrees of freedom undefined, when teeth collide, reaction forces that might otherwise cause a tooth to change direction and deviate from its prescribed path are constrained by aligner material fully surrounding the teeth.
In contrast, attachments and archwires provide for at least one degree of freedom that remains undefined: mesio-distal movement as the result of sliding mechanics, as well as “slop” between wire and bracket and the wire deflection, particularly when highly flexible wires are used. Because an archwire is able to slide along a channel in the attachment, i.e. the attachment slot, the tooth is free to move mesio-distally if a force is applied in any other direction that contains a significant mesio-distal vector component. For example, a 45° diagonal force vector on a tooth might decompose into a labial vector component and a distal vector component, each having approximately equal magnitude. If the tooth is positioned somewhat to the lingual side of its mesial neighbor, it may be blocked on its mesial edge from moving labially by the interfering tooth, but provided there is no contact with a distal neighbor, it may be free to slide along the archwire in a distal direction until the interference with its mesial neighbor is resolved. Once this occurs, the tooth may be free to express movement in the labial direction according to the labial vector component of the force vector. Such freedom is not possible with a conventional aligner tray due to the tray surrounding the teeth on all sides.
By treating with attachments & archwires in an initial phase of treatment, sliding mechanics can be exploited to resolve collisions between teeth in the interproximal regions automatically, without having to prescribe their movements exactly. This can be faster than treating with aligner trays alone because the applied forces from the archwires are relatively continuous, and the movements are less impeded by virtue of allowing more degrees of freedom.
One advantage of fixed orthodontic appliances used in the wire driven phase is that the risk of patient non-compliance is reduced, as the patient is not able to take out the appliance during the treatment. The amount of control needed to accomplish the initial tooth movements in the wire driven phase can be set by adjusting the slot wire system. For example, attachments placed on all or a portion of the teeth can be impacted by the elastic properties of the archwires. For example, in some embodiments archwires with a rectangular cross-sectional shape and corresponding rectangular wire retaining regions in the attachments on the teeth provide the greatest degree of control. In some cases, particularly when nickel titanium and copper nickel titanium wires are used, the archwires can deliver relatively continuous forces, which are very helpful to move teeth in the initial stages of a treatment, where often a lot of travel is needed. In contrast, force exerted by an aligner tray may decrease more rapidly once a tooth has begun to move. As such, wires tend to have a longer range of expression compared to aligner trays.
A typical malocclusion that benefits from a wire driven phase is crowded front teeth, which can take a long time to be resolved by an aligner, but for the reasons outlined above has a rapid progression when being treated with attachments and archwires. Because the aligner tray is pushing on a crown of a tooth, which is embedded in the jawbone, aligner trays tend to tip the crowns of the teeth into a space, rather than keeping them upright, and in some examples an attachment and wire system is better able to move the crowns without this undesired side effect.
A wire provides a track along which the bracket can slide, and the driving force is typically an elastomeric chain connecting the brackets and pulling them together, so the engagement between the bracket slot and the archwire provides limited opportunity for the crowns of the teeth to tip into the space. In another example, resolving curve of Spee by extruding bicuspids may be more efficient with an attachment and wire system due to the difficulty in grasping the teeth with the cavities in the aligner tray. Rotating round teeth like bicuspids and cuspids can also be troublesome with aligners, and may benefit from an attachment and wire approach.
In some embodiments, if custom-bent (or otherwise custom fabricated) archwires are used in the first wire driven phase of treatment, there is an opportunity to place the bonded appliances (attachments) more strategically, not just in positions that would be convenient for achieving the movements of the wire-driven phase, but also with consideration given to tray engagement mechanics and the movements prescribed in other phases of treatment using aligner trays. For example, the most convenient appliance bonding site on the tooth for attachment and wire phase might be the facial axis point (FA Point), but to improve engagement of a clear aligner to the tooth in the aligner phase, given the prescribed tooth movement, the lack of features in the natural dental anatomy, and the coupling points on the tooth, the appliance might be better placed 1-2 mm gingival of the FA Point. In such a case, if modifying the position of the appliance presents no deleterious effects, then the compromised position might be used for the wire driven phase, and a custom archwire can be fabricated that is designed to engage the appliance at this other position. The appliance would then be better positioned for the aligner phase when the archwire is removed and a clear aligner is installed on the teeth.
In some examples, the attachments can also be placed on the lingual surface of the teeth, which can make the wire-driven phase more aesthetic for the patient. However, in other examples the attachments are on the labial surface of the teeth are and thus visible. For this reason, patients tend to prefer aligner trays for reasons of aesthetics and easier dental hygiene, there is a motivation to switch to aligners as soon as the difficult tooth movements, which are likely to be impeded by collisions, have been achieved. Aligners are considered less painful and a more lifestyle type of appliance, as the aligners are barely visible and allow the patient to decide for themselves when or when not to have them in the mouth. Aligner trays can provide little tooth movement per stage only, and can be limited mechanically to certain tooth movements. Smaller tooth movements per stage and precisely defined tooth positions and orientations are good preconditions for excellent finishing capabilities. In some embodiments, the aligner trays can be used for smaller, finishing movements of the teeth after the larger tooth movements are complete from the wire driven phase.
The orthodontic treatment methods of the present disclosure provide two appliance types as two different tools with different capabilities and strengths, and offer the potential for faster and more aesthetic patient treatments. It is desirable if the same appliances which were used to move teeth in the first phase of treatment using attachments and wires can also be used to aid movement of the teeth in the second phase of treatment by providing improved engagement of the aligner tray with the teeth.
In step 368, after larger tooth movements are substantially complete or completed in step 366, a series of aligner trays is digitally designed and fabricated including one or more cavities configured with a volume or geometry to accommodate smaller or finishing movements of the attachment bonded teeth from the second position to a third position. In step 370, the archwire is removed from the attachments and each of the alignment trays in the series are applied over the teeth of the patient to gradually move the teeth from the second position to the third position.
In step 372, following the aligner phase set forth in steps 368-370, in an optional additional phase a second archwire, which may be the same or different from the first archwire, is inserted into the attachments for further tooth movement. In some examples, the wire-driven phase including the second archwire may be followed by an optional alignment tray or further series of aligner trays with cavities configured to move the teeth from the second position to the third position.
In step 374, in another optional phase following the aligner phase in steps 368-370, the attachments are removed from the teeth and a second series of aligner trays is designed with cavities configured to move the teeth from the second position to the third position, or to maintain the alignment of the teeth in the third position.
In some examples, the dental treatment system according to the present disclosure is provided to a dental practitioner in the form a kit including a series of attachments with different shapes configured to provide different types of tooth movements (more details are provided below), archwires and orthodontic aligner trays, as well as instructions for patient use. Suitable additional items for the kit, which are not intended to be limiting, include, one or more of a carrying case, a removal tool to help a patient remove the aligner from the teeth, a seating tool to assist forcing the aligners onto the teeth, a tooth brush, aligner tray cleaning tablets, powder/crystals, or gel/foam/liquid, abrasive papers or objects for addressing discomfort from sharp edges or corners on the dental appliance, a whitening gel or pen, dental floss, a dental pick, wax, and the like.
A wide variety of different attachment designs may be used to achieve specific tooth movements in the methods above, and some examples, which are not intended to be limiting, are shown and discussed below.
Referring now to
The attachment articles 410A, 410C include bodies 412A, 412C each having a bonding portion 414A, 414C attached to respective tooth surfaces 416A, 416C. The bodies 412A, 412C further include a spacer portion 430A, 430C that extend away from the tooth surfaces 416A, 416C. The spacer portions 430A, 430C include a substantially planar portion 431A, 431C that is substantially normal to the tooth surfaces 416A, 416C. The planar portions 431A, 431C extend into a downwardly facing catch 422A, 422C. The catches 422A, 422C each include an internal surface 424A, 424C that forms a generally J-shaped groove 426A, 426C configured to retain an archwire 480.
An external surface of the catches 422A, 422C include an exposed external engagement surface 440A, 440C configured to releasably engage an appropriately shaped indentation in an aligner tray (not shown in
The attachment article 410B includes a body 412B with a bonding portion 414B attached to the tooth surface 416B. The body 412B further includes a spacer portion 430B that extends outwardly from the tooth surface 416B. The spacer portion 430B includes a substantially planar portion 431B substantially normal to the tooth surface 416B. A wall 435B extends generally normal to the planar portion 431B and substantially parallel to the tooth surface 416B. The wall 435B forms an upwardly facing catch 422B. The catch 422B forms a generally J-shaped groove 426B configured to retain the archwire 480.
An external surface of the catch 422B includes an exposed external engagement surface 440B configured to releasably engage an appropriately shaped indentation in an aligner tray (not shown in
As shown schematically in
In some embodiments, the center attachment 410B can optionally be positioned higher on the surface 416B as an over-correction to ensure better engagement of the archwire 480 in the groove 426B of the catch 422B, and to maintain archwire retention even when the tooth 420B is in the intended position. In some examples, the attachment 410B can be positioned such that the forces applied to the tooth 420B fall below a threshold necessary to further move the tooth, and the attachment 410B retains the archwire.
Referring now to
The attachment articles 510A, 510C include bodies 512A, 512C each having a bonding portion 514A, 514C attached to respective tooth surfaces 516A, 516C. The bodies 512A, 512C further include a spacer portion 530A, 530C that extend outwardly from the tooth surfaces 516A, 516C. The spacer portions 530A, 530C include a substantially planar portion 531A, 531C that is substantially normal to the tooth surfaces 516A, 516C. The planar portions 531A, 531C extend into a downwardly facing catch 522A, 522C. The bodies 512A, 512C further include a generally upwardly facing catch 523A, 523C.
The upwardly facing catches 522A, 522C and the downwardly facing catches 523A, 523C form an internal surface 524A, 524C that forms a generally C-shaped groove 526A, 526C configured to retain an archwire 580.
An external surface of the catches 522A, 522C, 523A, 523C include an exposed external engagement surface 540A, 540C configured to releasably engage an appropriately shaped indentation construction in an aligner tray (not shown in
The attachment article 510B includes a body 512B with a bonding portion 514B attached to the tooth surface 516B of a tooth 520B. The body 512B further includes a spacer portion 530B that extends outwardly from the tooth surface 516B. The spacer portion 530B includes a substantially planar portion 531B substantially normal to the tooth surface 516B. A wall 535B extends generally normal to the planar portion 531B and substantially parallel to the tooth surface 516B. The wall 535B forms a surface 524B that extends into an upwardly facing catch 522B. The catch 522B forms a generally J-shaped groove 526B configured to retain the archwire 580 and exert force along the lingual direction on the tooth 520B.
An external surface of the catch 522B includes an exposed external engagement surface 540B configured to releasably engage an appropriately shaped indentation construction in an aligner tray (not shown in
The groove J-shaped 526B in the catch 522B grabs the wire 580 like a hand grabs the handle of a bucket. The grooves 526A, 526C of the attachments 510A, 510C distal and mesial to the center attachment 510B point lingually, and the wire 580 is retained in the grooves 526A-C because of forces applied to the archwire 580 in a direction opposite to the groove openings.
In various embodiments, the attachments 550-558 can be selected manually or with software following an assessment of how a particular tooth needs to move from a first maloccluded position to a second less maloccluded position. In a digital setup software used to plan orthodontic treatments, the transformation matrix from malocclusion to setup is known for every tooth. From this matrix a resulting movement vector can be defined. Based on these data, software could select from the above attachments that best represents the movement vector. For example, if primarily lingual tooth movement is desired, software could initially select the attachment 554 in
When software is utilized to determine the precise movement for each tooth, in some embodiments the attachments of
Referring now to
In a setup phase 610, one or more custom archwires are configured in an appliance design phase 612 based on the tooth attachment positions and selected attachments determined in steps 606 and 608. In step 614, the design is examined using finite element analysis (FEA) in step 616 to determine if the wire forces retain the archwires in all attachments during the entire course of patient treatment.
If FEA determines that the wire forces will retain the archwires in the selected attachments, the design is completed in step 618. If one or more of the archwires may potentially be dislodged from an attachment during treatment, in step 620 the attachments may optionally be replaced with a self-ligating attachment design (see, for example,
Once the attachments and archwires are configured, and the locations of an attachment is determined for each tooth, the wire-driven phase of the orthodontic treatment commences.
The process of
As shown schematically in
Referring now to
Similarly, an attachment article 710C includes a body 712C with a bonding portion 714C attached to a surface 716C of a tooth 720C. The body 712C includes an upwardly (i.e., occlusally) facing catch 722C that forms a wire-retaining groove 726C configured to retain the archwire 780 adjacent to the tooth surface 716C. An external surface of the catch 722C includes an exposed external engagement surface 740C configured to releasably engage an appropriately shaped indentation construction in an aligner tray (not shown in
A tooth 720B includes an attachment article 710B with a first body 711B and a second body 713B. The bodies 711B and 713B each attach to a tooth surface 716B via respective bonding portions 714B-1 and 714B-2.
The first body 711B includes a spacer portion 730B-1 extending outwardly from the tooth surface 716B, and a downwardly facing catch 722B-1 extends along a portion of a length of the spacer portion 730B-1. The catch 722B-1 forms a generally J-shaped groove 726B-1 configured to retain the archwire 780 adjacent to the tooth surface 716B. An external surface of the catch 722B-1 includes an exposed external engagement surface 740B-1 configured to releasably engage an appropriately shaped indentation in an aligner tray (not shown in
Similarly, the second body 713B includes a spacer portion 730B-2 extending outwardly from the tooth surface 716B but has an upwardly facing catch 722B-2 that extends along a portion of a length of the spacer portion 730B-2. The upwardly facing catch 722B-2 works along with downwardly facing catch 722B-1 on the first body 711B to securely retain the archwire 780 and angulate the tooth 720B. The catch 722B-2 forms a generally J-shaped groove 726B-2 configured to retain the archwire 780 adjacent to the tooth surface 716B. In the embodiment of
An external surface of the catch 722B-2 includes an exposed external engagement surface 740B-2 configured to releasably engage an appropriately shaped indentation construction in an aligner tray (not shown in
Referring to
The body 812A of the attachment article 810A includes a spacer 830A which forms a downwardly facing catch 822A. The body 812A further forms a groove 826A with a generally C-shaped cross section configured to retain an archwire 880. The catch 822A includes an exposed external engagement surface 840A configured to releasably engage an appropriately shaped indentation in an aligner tray (not shown in
The body 812C of the attachment article 810C includes a spacer 830C that extends normal to the tooth surface 816C. The body 812C forms an upwardly facing catch 822C with a groove 826C having a J-shaped cross section configured to retain the archwire 880. The catch 822C includes an exposed external engagement surface 840C configured to releasably engage an appropriately shaped indentation construction in an aligner tray (not shown in
The body 812B of the attachment article 810B includes a spacer 830B that extends normal to the tooth surface 816B. The body 812B forms a first upwardly facing catch 822B-1 with a groove 826B-1 having a J-shaped cross section configured to retain the archwire 880. The body 812B further includes a second downwardly facing catch 822B-2 with a C-shaped cross section and a groove 826B-2. The catches 822B-1 and 822B-2 are separated by a medial portion 823B of the body 812B that is oriented generally parallel to the tooth surface 816B.
The catches 822B-1 and 822B-2 each include an exposed external engagement surface 840B-1 and 840B-2 configured to releasably engage an appropriately shaped indentation construction in an aligner tray (not shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In some embodiments, relatively simple attachments designs such as those shown in
Following the completion of the wire-driven phase of the treatment plan, the archwire is removed from the attachments 1010, and the attachments remain in position on the teeth. The engagement surfaces 1040 on the attachments 1010 can be used to releasably connect to the aligner tray during an aligner phase of treatment that follows the wire-driven treatment phase.
Various embodiments of the invention have been described. These and other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2021/061860 | 12/16/2021 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63132854 | Dec 2020 | US |