The invention refers to a supply system for tooth samples for determining the brightness, the chroma and/or the shade of natural and/or bleached teeth.
Based on the criteria concerning the brightness, the chroma and the shade of human teeth, described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,498,157, the applicant has developed a supply system for tooth samples designated as VITA Toothguide 3D-Master. The supply system Toothguide 3D-Master is illustrated in
In the determination of the brightness, the chroma and the shade of a natural or a bleached tooth, the brightness is determined in a first step (
Although the VITA Toothguide 3D-Master allows for a very exact determination of the brightness, the chroma and the shade of a tooth, it has shown that the handling is difficult. For instance, it is difficult to exactly determine the brightness group in the first step if the tooth color to be determined is very chromatic. This is due to the fact that the human eye only has a limited ability to differentiate between brightness and chroma and that it compensates one for the other. Chromatic colors are thus perceived as darker. This may result in a wrong degree of brightness being selected in the first step. This error can not be corrected in the subsequent steps.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a supply system for tooth samples for the determination of the brightness, the chroma and/or the shade that is simple to handle and allows to exactly determine the brightness, the chroma and/or the shade with a high reliability.
The object is achieved with a supply system as defined in claim 1, 6 or 9.
An essential element of the invention is the simplification of the supply system. This is achieved by providing individual receiving elements in which the individual tooth samples are arranged only in linear array. Here, preferably, no plurality of sample pins, each carrying a tooth sample, is connected, e.g. pivotally, with a sample holder, as is the case with the 3D-Master. Rather, the individual tooth samples, for instance those fastened on respective sample pins, are broken up. According to the invention, the tooth samples are arranged singly and side by side, i.e. linearly, in one row. Thus, the optical clarity is drastically improved. According to the invention, the supply system in the different embodiments of the invention, respectively comprises a plurality of receiving elements. The individual receiving elements are used one after the other to determine the brightness, the chroma and/or the shade. As a result, the number of tooth samples to be considered in one determination step is drastically reduced.
A first preferred embodiment of the supply system comprises two receiving elements. A first receiving element has a plurality of tooth sample groups arranged side by side. The tooth samples arranged in one group have the same brightness and the same shade. Using the first receiving element, it is thus readily possible in a first step to determine the brightness group. This is possible in a simple manner in particular when using the medium chroma degree since each group preferably comprises a maximum of three tooth samples. After the brightness group has been determined, the chroma can be determined within the corresponding group. For the determination of the shade, a second receiving element is provided which can be used independent of the first receiving element. The second receiving element in turn comprises a plurality of tooth sample groups arranged side by side. Within each group, the tooth samples have the same brightness, but different shades. Further, even a fine grading of the chroma can be provide within the individual groups. Here, the second receiving element may comprise two groups per degree of brightness. One of the groups includes more yellowish shades, while the other includes more reddish shades.
Since the individual tooth samples, which are in particular held by sample pins, are preferably removable from the receiving elements, especially by pulling them out, it is possible to take the tooth sample selected in the first and second step from the first receiving element and to hold it next to the tooth samples of the second receiving element for a better comparison of both. Further, removing the individual tooth samples allows to hold the same immediately to the tooth of a patient.
The first embodiment of the invention is preferably developed such that, for a further simplification of the first step, i.e. for the determination of the brightness, an additional third receiving element is provided. This receiving element comprises tooth samples of different brightness, with only one tooth sample being preferably provided per degree of brightness. Here, preferably all tooth samples arranged in the third receiving element are of an identical shade, especially a medium shade, and or of an identical chroma, especially a medium chroma. When the brightness has been determined using the third receiving element, the chroma and the shade are determined as described above.
In a second embodiment of the invention the third receiving element, which in particular has only one tooth sample per degree of brightness, is combined with a fourth receiving element into a supply system. Here, the fourth receiving element includes a plurality of brightness groups of tooth samples, the tooth samples in each group being comprised into tooth samples of identical brightness. Preferably, an order of tooth samples is defined within this brightness group with respect to the chroma and the shade.
In a third embodiment of the invention, as in the other embodiments, a plurality of receiving elements is provided in which a plurality of tooth samples is arranged only linearly, i.e. side by side. A receiving element, referred to as the fifth receiving element to avoid confusion, includes a plurality of tooth sample groups, the chroma of the tooth samples being identical within each group. Preferably, all groups have an identical, especially a medium shade. Within each group, the respective brightness of the tooth samples vary, these being ordered preferably from light to dark. A second receiving element of this embodiment corresponds to the second receiving element for determining the shade, which has been described in the context of the first embodiment.
Thus, the invention has the specific advantage of a reduction to a linear realization. Thereby, a dentist is provided with a familiar linear arrangement of the color scale, however, offering the possibility of an improved and more accurate selection with respect to the brightness, the chroma and/or the shade.
The following is a detailed description of the invention with reference to preferred embodiments.
In the Figures:
In a first preferred embodiment (
In the first described embodiment (
The second receiving element 22 comprises six different groups 32 o tooth samples which in the preferred embodiment illustrated each comprise two tooth samples 30. Each individual group 32 comprises tooth samples of an identical shade, either the shade L or the shade R. Within the individual groups 32, the tooth samples further have the same brightness, wherein two respective groups 32 may be comprised into one main group 34 so that the same brightness exists within the main group 34. Within the individual groups 32, the tooth samples 30 have different chromas, with the embodiment illustrated showing intermediate degrees 1.5 and 2.5.
For a selection of the brightness, the chroma and the shade, a dentist or a dental technician will first select one of the degrees of brightness 1-5, using the first receiving element 20. Then, the dentist chooses the chroma 1, 2 or 3 within the degree of brightness. Thereafter, using the second receiving element 22, the shade is selected, employing a respective main group 34 in dependence on the brightness found before. Possibly, the receiving element 22 may be divided into several receiving sub-elements, wherein each receiving sub-element preferably comprises a main group 34. This facilitates the handling, since only the corresponding receiving sub-element is needed to determine the color complex.
In the extension of the first embodiment, illustrated in
In a step prior to the steps described for
In the second preferred embodiment of the supply system according to the invention (
The additional receiving element provided in this embodiment, i.e. the fourth receiving element 38, is divided into several receiving sub-elements 40 in the embodiment illustrated. Each individual receiving sub-element 40 comprises a group of tooth samples 30. Except for the first group in which the two degrees of brightness 0 and 1 are comprised, each group exclusively includes tooth elements of the same degree of brightness. Within a degree of brightness, tooth samples of different chromas and different shades are provided. In the preferred embodiment, these are sorted, the shades L or R being arranged, respectively, between the tooth samples 30 with the chromas 1, 2 or 3. In the embodiment illustrated, two tooth samples 30 of the shade L or the shade R are provided, respectively, indicating a value of the intermediate chroma, i.e. 1.5 and 2.5.
The first group is an exception, the shades L and R not being provided therein. This group exclusively contains comprised tooth samples of the brightness 0 and 1 in connection with different chromas. It should be noted here that the natural tooth color scale is largest in the range of medium brightness. In the ranges of very great brightness or very low brightness, the scale is narrower. Moreover, the medium degrees of brightness appear more frequently, whereas very great and very low degrees of brightness are clearly less frequent. Therefore, in the brightness group 1 and 5, M colors are an acceptable compromise. “1M3” is outside the natural tooth color scale. Another exception is formed by the last group, the brightness group 5. Here, no tooth samples of different shades are included either.
Also in the third embodiment (
In this embodiment of the supply system two receiving elements are again provided. The receiving element used first is the fifth receiving element 42. the receiving element carries a plurality of tooth sample groups, with the tooth samples in the individual groups A, B, C having the same chroma 1, 2, 3. Within the individual groups A, B, C, the tooth samples 30 differ in their degree of brightness 0-5. All tooth samples of the fifth receiving element 42 have the same medium shade. Using the fifth receiving element 42, the brightness and the chroma are determined. Here, it is up to the dentist or the dental technician whether he wishes to determine the brightness or the chroma first. For example, he may first determine the chroma, i.e. select one of groups A, B, C, and then determine the brightness within the respective group. It is also possible, for instance, to first determine the brightness 0-5 using the intermediate chroma group B and to then check whether the chroma of degree 1 or 3 is more fitting.
The further receiving element provided in this embodiment of the present supply system is the receiving element 22 (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07101150.6 | Jan 2007 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP07/63875 | 12/13/2007 | WO | 00 | 7/20/2009 |