The present invention is related generally to the field of orthodontics, and more particularly to systems and methods for measurement of teeth movements.
One objective in orthodontics is to move a patient's teeth to positions where the teeth function optimally and aesthetically. Conventionally, appliances such as braces are applied to the teeth of the patient by an orthodontist. Each appliance exerts continual force on the teeth and gradually urges the teeth toward their ideal positions. Over a period of time, the orthodontist adjusts the appliances to move the teeth toward their final destination.
Generally, the orthodontist specifies in a prescription the final tooth arrangement. The prescription is based on the orthodontist's knowledge and experience in selecting the intended final position of each tooth. The process of attaching the braces to teeth is tedious and painful to the patient. Additionally, each visit reduces the “chair-time” available to the orthodontist that could be used for another patient. Hence, the process of treating teeth using braces can be expensive.
New methods, such as those described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,975,893, allow the treatment to be planned in advance and all individual appliances to be fabricated at the outset of treatment. The appliances may thus be provided to the patient as a single package or system. Unlike braces, the patient need not visit the treating professional every time an adjustment in the treatment is made. While the patients will usually want to visit their treating professionals periodically to assure that treatment is going according to the original plan, eliminating the need to visit the treating professional each time an adjustment is to be made allows the treatment to be carried out in many more, but smaller, successive steps while still reducing the time spent by the treating professional with the individual patient. Moreover, the ability to use polymeric shell appliances that are more comfortable, less visible, and removable by the patient, greatly improves patient compliance, comfort, and satisfaction.
In the above system, and in other computer-aided teeth treatment systems, as a first step, a digital data set representing an initial tooth arrangement is obtained, referred to hereinafter as the IDDS. The IDDS may be obtained in a variety of ways. For example, the patient's teeth may be scanned or imaged using well known technology, such as X-rays, three-dimensional x-rays, computer-aided tomographic images or data sets, magnetic resonance images, etc. Methods for digitizing such conventional images to produce data sets useful in the present invention are well known and described in the patent and medical literature. Usually, however, the present invention will rely on first obtaining a plaster cast of the patient's teeth by well known techniques, such as those described in Graber, Orthodontics: Principle and Practice, Second Edition, Saunders, Philadelphia, 1969, pp. 401–415. After the tooth casting is obtained, it can be digitally scanned using a conventional laser scanner or other range acquisition system to produce the IDDS. The data set produced by the range acquisition system may, of course, be converted to other formats to be compatible with the software which is used for manipulating images within the data set, as described in more detail below. General techniques for producing plaster casts of teeth and generating digital models using laser scanning techniques are described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,605,459. After scanning, computer models of teeth on an upper jaw and a lower jaw are generated.
One advantage of the digital model teeth is the possibility of accurate measurements. Traditionally, dentists depend on manual measurement to measure dental features and orthodontic properties. They use rulers on teeth impression or X-rays images. Such manual measurements have limitations because they are manual processes and two dimensional measurements. Thus, the measurement results are not very precise and the rotation is difficult to measure. With the digital model, precise measurement and movement analysis can be performed. Using three-dimensional rigid body analysis accurate and complete movement of a tooth or the entire jaw can be calculated.
One application of the measurement is analyzing an orthodontic treatment. After any orthodontic treatment is performed, the outcome of the treatment needs to be examined. With the conventional measurement methods, such as measuring impressions or superimposing X-rays, there are many sources of uncertainties in the conclusions. Using the digital models, one can get a precise and complete analysis of treatment. The complete analysis can be achieved by taking two digital models, one before treatment and one after treatment, superimposing them in a virtual space, and calculating the movement of each tooth.
The present invention includes a system, apparatus and computer-implemented method for analyzing an orthodontic treatment by using computer models of teeth.
In one aspect, a method for matching computer models of two sets of teeth includes calculating a difference for two sets of teeth shapes; finding the position of one set of teeth with respect to the other set of teeth; calculating a positional difference of the corresponding teeth; and finding a corrective path to bring one set of teeth to the other set of teeth.
Implementations of the above aspect may include one or more of the following. The calculation of a difference can include calculating and displaying shape difference for each tooth of the jaw; and identifying a corresponding location for each shape difference. Finding the position can include placing two jaw impressions in a single coordinate system; selecting a positioning reference; and determining a positional difference for each of the corresponding teeth in the jaw impression. The method can also include matching two impressions of a jaw having teeth thereon; calculating proclination, extrusion, distalization of the teeth; and calculating rotation and orientation changes of the teeth. Moreover, the method can also include finding a correction path from current teeth positions to planned treatment teeth positions.
The advantage of the invention may include one or more of the following. It provides accurate teeth matching and jaw matching results. It reveals the shape difference between two different sets of impressions from the same teeth. It can provide a complete rigid body movement, three translations and three rotations, for each and every tooth.
Referring now to
As set forth in the prior applications, each polymeric shell may be configured so that its tooth-receiving cavity has a geometry corresponding to an intermediate or final tooth arrangement intended for the appliance. The patient's teeth are repositioned from their initial tooth arrangement to a final tooth arrangement by placing a series of incremental position adjustment appliances over the patient's teeth. The adjustment appliances are generated at the beginning of the treatment, and the patient wears each appliance until the pressure of each appliance on the teeth can no longer be felt. At that point, the patient replaces the current adjustment appliance with the next adjustment appliance in the series until no more appliances remain. Conveniently, the appliances are generally not affixed to the teeth and the patient may place and replace the appliances at any time during the procedure. The final appliance or several appliances in the series may have a geometry or geometries selected to overcorrect the tooth arrangement, i.e., have a geometry which would (if fully achieved) move individual teeth beyond the tooth arrangement which has been selected as the “final.” Such over-correction may be desirable in order to offset potential relapse after the repositioning method has been terminated, i.e., to permit movement of individual teeth back toward their pre-corrected positions. Over-correction may also be beneficial to speed the rate of correction, i.e., by having an appliance with a geometry that is positioned beyond a desired intermediate or final position, the individual teeth will be shifted toward the position at a greater rate. In such cases, the use of an appliance can be terminated before the teeth reach the positions defined by the appliance.
The polymeric shell 111 can fit over all teeth present in the upper or lower jaw. Often, only certain one(s) of the teeth will be repositioned while others of the teeth will provide a base or an anchor region for holding the appliance 111 in place as the appliance 111 applies a resilient repositioning force against the tooth or teeth to be repositioned. In complex cases, however, multiple teeth may be repositioned at some point during the treatment. In such cases, the moved teeth can also serve as a base or anchor region for holding the repositioning appliance.
The polymeric appliance 111 of
Referring on
The process 206 of
The process also determines necessary coordinate transformations from the expected 3D coordinates for each tooth to the 3D coordinates for the corresponding tooth in the impression. Once this process is done, the difference of the impression of the individual tooth is ascertained. Based on the information, the process determines tooth alignment data in the current position.
In the next process 208, a second matching operation is performed to determine the position of the new jaw relative to the original coordinate system. The current teeth alignment data previously determined is then compared against the current stage. This process positions the scanned jaw impression relative to the original jaw position. Once each tooth is placed, the process can determine the individual difference between the current jaw and original jaw. The process then provides three options: visualize any discrepancy; report the discrepancy in a report or a failure analysis; and create MCC ADF (the file that moves the tooth from its current tooth impression to the expected tooth location).
Referring onto
The process of
Turning now to
From boxes 322,332, or 342, the process generates various sample points on the reference teeth and corresponding points on the current teeth (344). Next, it calculates position transformation using the sample points (346). It processes and positions the current teeth with the transformation (348) and generates a visualization of the difference (350.)
The process provides three different options to position the new jaw in the original coordinate system. User can choose one of the options freely. The first option relies on stationary teeth that are expected to remain stationary throughout the stages. The stationary teeth are then used as a landmark for comparison purposes. Low velocity option allows the user to pick a tooth that moves at a relatively low velocity as a landmark approximation. The statistical filtering approach can be used for selecting small standard error as reference teeth.
Turning onto
Turning now to
First, the process obtains the deviation stage and a target stage (380). Next, the process sets the position at a deviation stage as the initial position (382). Additionally, the process sets a position at a target stage as the final position (384). Finally, the process creates a new ADF using the initial position and the final position (386). The process obtains the deviation stage, or the stage where the current impression is taken and where the patient's teeth have gone off the planned path so the aligner fails to fit the teeth. The system also obtains the target stage, which is the stage that the patient's teeth is expected to be. The process uses the current teeth position as the initial position and the target stage of the original treatment plan as the final position.
Referring onto
In the third operation, analysis of the match result is performed (426). First, the position discrepancy is computed (428). Next, a text file is generated (430) or alternatively, a CSV file can be generated (432).
In the final operation, the process 400 creates the MCC ADF (440). In this operation, the target stage can be specified (442) and the result in the MCC file is exported for correction treatment (444).
The above described system matches two different impressions of a patient, one before treatment and one after treatment, the method positions them together in a single three-dimensional space, and calculates the individual tooth movement. This also includes finding the intermediate treatment if the patient's current teeth are off from the intended treatment course.
In this system, there are two different sets of digital models of teeth, the original teeth and the new teeth. First, a comparison between two corresponding teeth in the different set is found by an iterative searching algorithm. The search algorithm finds the relative position of the teeth by minimizing the distance between two superimposed teeth. The matching process is completed throughout the entire teeth of a jaw. After matching the teeth, the shape difference between each of the corresponding teeth, one before treatment and one after treatment, can be identified as a by-product of the matching. This teeth matching provides a foundation for jaw matching so that each new tooth position can be represented relative to the original tooth position. Then, the matched position of individual teeth is used to position the entire jaw. The entire jaw needs an external reference to set the position. A fixed external reference such as rugae in the patient's mouth can be used. If a fixed external reference is not available, some teeth can be used for the reference as well. Once the entire jaw is positioned, the relative movement or discrepancy is precisely calculated. The calculated results are reported in text and also visualized on computer screen.
Various alternatives, modifications, and equivalents may be used in lieu of the above components. Although the final position of the teeth may be determined using computer-aided techniques, a user may move the teeth into their final positions by independently manipulating one or more teeth while satisfying the constraints of the prescription. Additionally, the techniques described here may be implemented in hardware or software, or a combination of the two. The techniques may be implemented in computer programs executing on programmable computers that each includes a processor, a storage medium readable by the processor (including volatile and nonvolatile memory and/or storage elements), and suitable input and output devices. Program code is applied to data entered using an input device to perform the functions described and to generate output information. The output information is applied to one or more output devices. Each program can be implemented in a high level procedural or object-oriented programming language to operate in conjunction with a computer system. However, the programs can be implemented in assembly or machine language, if desired. In any case, the language may be a compiled or interpreted language. Each such computer program can be stored on a storage medium or device (e.g., CD-ROM, hard disk or magnetic diskette) that is readable by a general or special purpose programmable computer for configuring and operating the computer when the storage medium or device is read by the computer to perform the procedures described. The system also may be implemented as a computer-readable storage medium, configured with a computer program, where the storage medium so configured causes a computer to operate in a specific and predefined manner. Further, while the invention has been shown and described with reference to an embodiment thereof, those skilled in the art will understand that the above and other changes in form and detail may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the following claims.
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