The invention relates to a method for producing a rigid supporting prosthetic structure of the kind that is seen in the preamble of claim 1.
The invention also relates to a device for the production of a prosthetic structure of such kind, according to the preamble of the appended independent device claim.
A requirement for a prosthetic structure to correctly rest against fixtures, for instance implants, is that no significant stresses should occur in the structure when the same is connected to the fixtures. Such stresses can establish forces, which tend to displace the fixtures mutually, whereby the patient may experience them as negative. Such stresses may also lead to an incomplete alignment between co-operating support surfaces on the prosthetic structure and the respective fixture/implant, so that a tightened mounting screw can get a tendency of becoming threaded out when the structure is subjected to varying loads.
The fixtures usually comprise implants, for instance a dental implant. Usually, a model of the jaw of the patient is manufactured using implant analogues. On the same, a tubular member is releasably mounted by means of a fixing screw, which extends through the member and having a head that rests against a seating in the member. The threaded end of the fixing screw engages by a thread in the implant/the implant analogue in order to bring the support surfaces of the member and the implant analogue, for instance ring-shaped support surfaces, stably into solid contact with each other around the fixing member. Between adjacent pairs of such members along a line of implants, for instance dental implants in one of the jaws of a patient, bars are now to be bridgingly mounted on the members releasably carried by the implant analogues, without introducing any stresses. After that, the formed mounted structure is to be fixed in the substantially stressless state thereof. The intention is that the structure then may be provided with a superstructure of a conventional kind per se, for instance corresponding to a dental prosthesis and/or teeth, in order to, without problems, i.e., without introduction of stresses, subsequently be allowed to be connected to the implants in the patient by means of said members and the appurtenant fixing screws.
A previously known technique (“DynaStar”) includes that the implants have cup-shaped upper surfaces and that the bars are telescopic and have ball-shaped end bodies, which are articulately received in the recesses of the implants. The ball-shaped end portions of the bars have a throughput opening each for a fixing member, which with the threaded portion thereof is received in a central threaded boring in the implant and which by means of the head thereof clamps the ball down in the recess of the implant. In the mounting operation, the telescopic bar may be given a chosen length, and furthermore, the telescopic bar parts should be mutually fixed by welding, for the formation of a rigid and stiff structure that may be dismounted from the implants/the implant analogues.
A problem of the previously known structure is, however, that the balls of the bars should rest on the cup-shaped upper ends of the implants, whereby the possibility of displacement of the connection point of the bar along the axis of the implant cannot be attained in a simple way.
Another drawback is that the structure relies on telescopic bars, which means difficulties when the distances between adjacent implants are small.
An object of the invention is, therefore, to provide a method and a new device by means of which said drawbacks may be obviated entirely or partly.
The object is attained by the invention.
The invention is defined in the appended independent claims.
Embodiments of the invention are defined in the appended dependent claims.
Important features of the invention is that a body having a throughput channel is mounted on and displaced along a tubular member, which is releasably mounted on an implant/implant analogue at a desired axial position along said member. The body defines the position of the connection points of the connecting bars. This position may, in other words, be set by a chosen displacement of the body along the tubular member. The tubular member and the body should co-operate by a certain friction, for instance with a threaded joint or a frictional fitting, allowing the body to be displaced along the member by means of manually pressed forces into a chosen position.
When the distances between adjacent implants/implant analogues are relatively great, it may be advantageous to utilize axially extensible/shortenable (“telescopic”) bars, the end portions of which are, for instance, cup-shaped, concave and co-operate with the (for instance, convex) surface portions of the bodies adapted thereto, in order to adjust the same bars to the correct length and into shapewise bonding to the bodies. But when the distances between the implants/the implant analogues are relatively short, instead it may be advantageous to utilize bars having fixed length. Thus, a bar may be selected from a set or series of bars of different length. One of the two bodies to which the bar is to be joined, may have an oval shape.
In relation to the previously known structure, which also requires that the screw head and the ball have articulately co-operating surfaces having a centre of curvature that substantially coincides with the centre of curvature of the co-operating fusion faces of the ball and the implant, the invention also offers the advantage of allowing a greater range of deflection between the implant axis and the axis of the connecting bar.
In the structure according to the invention, at least one of the balls may have a protruding arm that forms a corbelling-out part of the structure, for instance for the extension of a dental prosthetic structure.
In the following, the invention will be described by way of examples, reference being made to the appended drawing.
The throughput channel of the ball is shown to have widened sections 32 at the ends in order to facilitate for the operator to thread the ball 30 onto the member 20.
The implant 10 is shown to have a thread 12, by means of which the implant is anchored in bone tissue 13, for instance in the jawbone of a patient when the implant 10 is to support a dental prosthesis.
As shown in
It will be appreciated that the structure 60 shown in
In a particularly preferred embodiment, the cup-edge may be chamfered in the respective end of the bar 40, such as shown at 48 in
In a few embodiments, axially adjustable bars 40 may bridge over a great distance range between adjacent balls 30, but when the distance between adjacent balls 30 becomes small, in certain cases it is preferred to form the bars 40 to have constant length. In order to, in a such case, be able to insert such bars 40′ between two balls in a simple way, one of the balls 30 may have an elliptical shape, i.e., have a varying radius around the circumference thereof in relation to the axis of the throughput channel 31, so that the ball has at least one substantially spherical bulge 38 of advanced radius R. When the bulge 36 extends substantially perpendicularly from the connecting line between two adjacent balls 30, a bar 40′ of fixed length may be inserted between the balls in order to then be fitted shape-wise bondingly in between the same by turning the oval ball 30′ into alignment to the axis of the bar 40′. Alternatively, the body may be entirely round, but have a throughput opening that is eccentrically located in relation to the envelope surface of the body.
A person skilled in the art appreciates that the structure 60 does not necessarily need to be built up on the implant 10 in the jaw of a patient, but may be built up on an implant analogue in a model of the jaw of the patient. When the structure 60 has been fixed, a prosthesis may be built up on the same, wherein the prosthesis, for instance, may comprise tooth members and prosthesis parts, when the construction is a dental prosthesis. It will be appreciated, however, that the prosthesis shows general use, even if it primarily has been developed in order to provide dental bridge constructions and the like, which should be releasably fixed to the implant 10.
Thanks to the invention, the structure 60 may easily be given a shape that does not have any built-in stresses and that, therefore, does not have any tendency to deviate from the shape it has been given in the building up on the implants/the implant analogues.
In the embodiment according to
Suitably, the bodies have two substantially diametrically opposed surface sectors for the co-operation with a respective bar end.
In other cases (
The concave surface portion of the bar end, for instance, is suitably cup-shaped and lacks undercut, the cup-shape receiving the convex surface portion of a radially protruding part of the body in such a way that it is possible to change the direction of the bar end in relation to the body. For instance, the concave surface has a greater radius than the convex one. When the first bar end is received on a first body, the co-operating surface portions of the second body and of the other end of the bar should be able to move into engagement with each other during turning, about in the same way as a cog and a gash of two co-operating cogwheels.
As can be seen in
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0402427-9 | Oct 2004 | SE | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/SE05/01481 | 10/6/2005 | WO | 4/6/2007 |