The present invention relates to the field of vibratory instruments, particularly for a dental handpiece.
Dentists, in fact, frequently use a device, usually known as a dental handpiece, that is provided with a vibratory instrument that allows, in particular scaling, planing or cutting a tooth.
The vibrations transmitted to the vibratory instrument are generally ultrasonic or sonic.
A vibratory instrument is already known from the prior art, in particular from FR 2 957 243, that comprises a tool, a tool-holder and complementary releasable means for vibrational coupling of the tool to the tool-holder in order to transmit vibrations from the tool-holder to the tool.
The vibrational coupling means usually comprise complementary vibrational coupling surfaces, which are generally conical or cylindro-conical, provided, respectively, on the tool and the tool-holder. These coupling means can be activated by relative movement of the tool and of the tool-holder along a coupling stroke that places the complementary vibrational coupling surfaces in contact. Thus, when the user, holding the handpiece, bears on a tooth using the tool, he gives rise to a relative movement between the tool and the tool-holder, leading to contact being established between the complementary vibrational coupling surfaces and, as a result, transmission of vibrations from the tool-holder to the tool. When the user moves the tool away from the tooth, the complementary vibrational coupling surfaces tend to separate from one another so that the tool no longer vibrates.
It is thus necessary to allow a coupling/uncoupling stroke of the complementary vibrational coupling surfaces while still keeping the tool and tool-holder connected together. To that end, the vibratory instrument described in FR 2 957 243 includes complementary releasable means for attaching the tool to the tool-holder, allowing, when a tool is attached to the tool-holder, the vibrational coupling/uncoupling stroke.
These attachment means include two attachment members, respectively a male and a female attachment member that can be attached together by relative movement along an attachment/detachment stroke that includes an axial component. The attachment members described in FR 2 957 243 are of the snap-fit type. Snap-fitting is achieved by relative axial movement of the two attachment members, by thus traveling through an axial attachment stroke.
The female attachment member is carried by the tool-holder and the male attachment member, which is elastically deformable, is carried by the tool. More particularly, the male attachment member has a general axisymmetrical shape and is split axially in such a manner as to locally allow the radial deformation thereof when the attachment/detachment stroke is executed. The male attachment member is provided with a collar, its elastic radial deformation of the attachment member making it possible either to interlock the collar into a complementary cutout provided in the female attachment member or to separate this collar from the cutout.
The attachment means described in FR 2 957 243 are relatively reliable. However, in a vibratory instrument such as that used by a dentist, the tool-holder and the tool are relatively slender, with the result that the split male attachment member is ultimately, in certain use circumstances, relatively fragile.
An object of the invention is to propose means for attachment of the tool to the tool-holder that are more robust than those proposed by FR 2 957 243, while retaining simple attachment means.
To that end, a subject of the invention is a vibratory instrument comprising:
characterized in that the male and female attachment members cannot be deformed during the attachment/detachment stroke, this stroke also including a component in a plane substantially transverse to the axial component, referred to as the transverse component, the axial and transverse components of the attachment/detachment stroke being defined by complementary interlocking shapes provided on the two attachment members.
The male and female attachment members proposed by the invention cannot be deformed during the attachment/detachment stroke and are therefore relatively more robust than those proposed in the prior art.
Furthermore, the stroke that allows the attachment or detachment of the male and female members is easily defined by the complementary interlocking shapes provided on the two attachment members.
Furthermore, the invention dispenses with the addition of supplementary elements to the usual attachment means. Indeed, the invention makes it possible to require, simply, by virtue of appropriate shapes provided on the existing attachment members, an attachment/detachment stroke that is sufficiently complex that it is not traveled through unexpectedly, without a deliberate action on the part of the user. This prevents any untimely separation of the complementary attachment means.
According to different optional features that correspond to different variants or to different embodiments of the invention:
A further subject of the invention is a handpiece provided with a vibratory instrument, characterized in that the vibratory instrument is as defined above.
The invention will be better understood upon the following reading given solely by way of non-limiting example and with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
The handpiece 10 is provided with a vibratory instrument 12 according to a first embodiment of the invention. This vibratory instrument 12 can allow, in particular, scaling, planing or tooth cutting.
Conventionally, the handpiece 10 comprises a body 14 with a general shape adapted to this body 14 being gripped by a user's hand.
In the following text, in accordance with a conventional use, a proximal or distal element will be described depending on whether this element is close (proximal) or distant (distal) from the user's hand.
The body 14 comprises a proximal end 14P provided with conventional means 16 for connection to a cord (not shown) for supplying fluids (water, air) and current to the handpiece 10.
The body 14 also comprises a distal end 14D extended by the vibratory instrument 12.
The body 14 further comprises an envelope 18 accommodating the conventional means including means 20 for generating sonic or ultrasonic vibrations and a member 22 for conveying vibrations between the vibration-generating means and the vibratory instrument 12.
The vibratory instrument 12 comprises a tool 24 and a tool-holder 26.
The tool 24 is provided with a distal working end 24D designed, in particular, to come into contact with a patient's tooth.
The tool-holder 26 is provided with a proximal end 26P connected, in a manner known per se, to a distal end 22D of the vibration-conveying member 22, for example by screwing (as shown), welding, adhesive bonding, etc. In a variant, the tool-holder 26 may extend the vibration-conveying member 22 by being made as a single piece with the latter.
In the example illustrated in
The proximal end 24P of the tool 24 is attached to the distal end 26D of the tool-holder 26 with the aid of complementary releasable means 28 for attaching the tool 24 to the tool-holder 26. These attachment means 28, shown in greater detail in
The vibratory instrument 12 is likewise provided with complementary releasable means 30 for vibrational coupling of the tool 24 to the tool-holder 26, shown in greater detail in
With reference to
In a variant, the complementary vibrational coupling surfaces could have other shapes, for example cylindro-conical shapes.
It will be noted that, when the proximal end 24P of the tool 24 is attached to the distal end 26D of the tool-holder 26, as shown in
By virtue of this clearance J1, the complementary vibrational coupling means 30 can be activated by relative movement of the tool 24 and of the tool-holder 26 along a vibrational coupling/decoupling stroke allowed by this clearance. This coupling/decoupling stroke generally include at least one of the following two components:
Thus, when the user, holding the handpiece 10, bears on a tooth with the tool 24, he gives rise to a relative movement between the tool 24 and the tool-holder 26 that leads to contact being established between the complementary vibrational coupling surfaces 32, 34 and, as a result, to the transmission of vibrations from the tool-holder 26 to the tool 24. When the user moves the tool 24 away from the tooth, the vibrational coupling surfaces 32, 34 tend to separate from one another in order that the tool 24 no longer vibrates.
The attachment means 28 allow, when the tool 24 is attached to the tool-holder 26, the vibrational coupling/decoupling stroke described above, while keeping the tool 24 and the tool-holder 26 connected together. To that end, the attachment means 28 include two attachment members, respectively a male 36 and a female 38 member, that can be attached together or separated from one another by relative movement along an attachment/detachment stroke.
In the case of the vibratory instrument 12 illustrated in
If the two attachment members 36, 38 are considered in the configuration where they are attached to one another (see
The attachment/detachment stroke is defined by complementary interlocking shapes on the two attachment members 36, 38. It will be noted that these two attachment members 36, 38 do not deform during the attachment/detachment stroke.
In the case of the vibratory instrument 12 illustrated in
These complementary threads 36F, 38F make it possible to define an attachment/detachment stroke that includes a first, axial component and a second component, called a transverse component, in a plane substantially transverse to the first axial component.
Thus, in the case of the two attachment members 36, 38 illustrated in
With reference to
The male attachment member 36 includes an axisymmetrical shaft 42 with a diameter largely smaller than that of the internal screw thread 38F of the female attachment member 38. The thread 36F of the male attachment member 36 is connected to the vibrational coupling surface 32 of the tool 24 by means of the shaft 42.
In the example shown in
In a variant, the two centering surfaces 44, 46 could be dispensed with.
It will be noted that the smaller diameter of the female vibrational coupling surface 34 of the tool-holder 26 is greater than the diameter of the thread 36F of the male attachment member 36. It will likewise be noted that the diameter of the centering surface 44 of the tool 24 is smaller than the diameter of the thread 36F of the male attachment member 36.
In order to attach the tool 24 to the tool-holder 26, first of all the male attachment member 36 is inserted into the female attachment member 38 by axially passing the centering surface 44 of the tool 24 and the thread 36F of the male attachment member 36 across the vibrational coupling surface 34 of the tool-holder 26.
Next, the thread 36F of the male attachment member 36 is screwed into the internal screw thread 38F of the female attachment member 38 until the entire thread 36F of the male attachment member 36 emerges into the recess 40 of the tool-holder 26. This culminates in the relative position of the attachment members 36, 38 shown in
It will be noted that the recess 40 is delimited by a surface forming a first axial retention stop 48 designed to interact, with axial clearance, with a second axial retention stop 50 provided on the male attachment member 36, for example at a distal end of the thread 36F. Interaction of the axial retention stops 48, 50 defines an end of the vibrational coupling/decoupling stroke corresponding to a position of deactivation of the vibrational coupling means 30.
When the tool 24 is attached to the tool-holder 26, the interaction, with clearance, of the centering surfaces 44, 46 enables the radial deviations of the attachment members 36, 38 relative to one another to be limited. This thus avoids any undesirable radial contact, on the one hand of the internal screw thread 38F against the shaft 42 and, on the other, of the thread 36F against the surface delimiting the recess 40, which may lead to peening of the threads 36F, 38F.
The dimensions of the recess 40 are adapted to allow axial and radial deviations of the thread 36F in this recess 40 as a result of the vibrational coupling/uncoupling stroke between the tool 24 and the tool-holder 26.
Furthermore, in the case illustrated in
Provision is made in the handpiece for conventional means for the circulation of at least one fluid (water and/or air) designed, for example, for cooling the tool and/or for generating a stream of fluid toward a zone treated by the user. These fluid-circulation means comprise, in the example shown in
When the tool 24 is attached to the tool-holder 26, the complementary interlocking shapes 36F, 38F of the two attachment members 36, 38 are separated from one another and thus allow the passage of fluid from the channel 52 toward the grooves 54, passing via the bore 47, the recess 40 and the internal screw thread 38F.
With reference to
In this case, the complementary interlocking shapes of the two attachment members 36, 38 are of the bayonet type and comprise an axial interlocking tongue 56 carried, for example, by the shaft 42 of the male attachment member 36, which is designed to interact with a complementary axial interlocking groove 58 provided, for example, in the female attachment member 38.
If the two attachment members 36, 38 are considered in the configuration in which they are attached to one another, as shown in
The complementary interlocking shapes illustrated in
In fact, in accordance with a bayonet-type stroke, in order to attach the tool 24 to the tool-holder 26 it is first necessary to interlock the tongue 56 in the groove 58 via translational movement substantially parallel to the longilinear direction X of the distal end 26D of the tool-holder 26 until this tongue 56 is inserted into the recess 40. Next, the male attachment member 36 is turned about the longilinear direction X in order angularly to offset the tongue 56 relative to the groove 58.
By means of interlocking interaction with the groove 58, the tongue 56 defines the axial component of the attachment/detachment stroke. Furthermore, the recess 40 forms a cutout allowing the transverse component of the attachment stroke. In fact, this transverse component is a rotation in a plane substantially transverse to the longilinear direction X.
The tool 24 is detached from the tool-holder 26, mutatis mutandis, by executing the stroke in a form that is the reverse of that described above.
The bayonet-type stroke is a stroke that is sufficiently complex to not be traveled through unexpectedly, without deliberate action on the part of the user of the handpiece 10.
It will be noted that the dimensions of the recess 40 are adapted to allow the axial and radial deviations of the tongue 56 in this recess 40 as a result of the vibrational coupling/uncoupling stroke between the tool 24 and the tool-holder 26. This prevents any undesirable radial contact of the tongue 56 against the surface delimiting the recess 40.
It will also be noted that, in the case of
In this case, as for the first variant shown in
Furthermore, in connection with the case shown in
Lastly, in the variant shown in
In this case, the tool-holder 26 extends the vibration-conveying member 22. In a variant, the tool-holder 26 may be connected to the vibration-conveying member 22 by means of screwing, welding, adhesive bonding, etc.
Furthermore, the tool-holder 26 has a general elongate shape in a curved longilinear direction X.
Unlike the vibratory instrument 12 shown in
Furthermore, as may be seen in
This arrangement of the distal working end 24D of the tool 24 allows efficient illumination of a zone treated by the user in the form of a conventional light source placed, for example, at the point L of the tool-holder 26 indicated in
The vibratory instrument according to the second embodiment of the invention is usually denoted as being of the “contra angle” type. This “contra angle” could also be obtained with a tool-holder 26 having a general elongate shape in an elbowed longilinear direction X.
In this second embodiment of the vibratory instrument, the envelope 18 covers the tool-holder 26. When the tool 24 is attached to the tool-holder 26, the tool 24 traverses the envelope 18 in such a manner that the male attachment member 36 extends substantially transversely to the longilinear direction X of the distal end of the tool-holder 24.
The shaft 42 of the male attachment member 36 includes an end for connection to the vibrational coupling surface 32 and a free end projecting to the exterior of the envelope 18 when the tool 24 is attached to the tool-holder 26.
The shaft 42 is provided with an annular trough 62 separating the ends of the shaft 42 in order to confer a retention-head function on the free end of the shaft 42. The free end of the shaft 42 will thus henceforth be called the “retention head 64”.
As may be seen in
Furthermore, unlike the first embodiment, in the second embodiment of the vibratory instrument 12, the female attachment member is formed by a slide 38 mounted so as to be movable in translation on the envelope 18. In a variant, the slide 38 could be mounted so as to be movable in translation on the tool-holder 26.
With reference to
The trough 62 and the slot 66 thus form the complementary interlocking shapes of the two attachment members 36, 38.
In order to guide the slide 38 and to limit the stroke thereof, this slide 38 includes an oblong hole 68 designed to interact with a travel-guide and -limiting stud 70 integral with the envelope 18.
As in the first embodiment of the vibratory instrument, a channel 52 is provided in the tool-holder 26 and grooves 54 are provided in at least one of the complementary vibrational coupling surfaces, for example the surface 32 of the tool 24, as shown in
In order to attach the tool 24 to the tool-holder 26, first of all the slide 38 is placed in such a manner as to align the through-end 66P of the slot 66 with the vibrational coupling surfaces 34 and centering surfaces 46 provided in the tool-holder 26.
Next, by means of a first translational movement substantially coaxial to this alignment, the retention head 64 of the male attachment member 36 is inserted into the through-end 66P of the slot 66 of the slide 38 forming the female attachment member. This first translational movement corresponds to the axial component of the attachment/detachment stroke.
Then, the slide 38 is moved in a second translational movement, perpendicularly to the axial component of the attachment/detachment stroke in order to interlock the groove 62 of the male attachment member 36 in the retention end 66R of the slot 66 of this slide 38. This second translational movement corresponds to the transverse component of the attachment/detachment stroke. Thus, the slide 38 forming the female attachment member is mounted on the envelope 18 in such a manner as to be movable relative to the tool 24 and to the tool-holder 26, in accordance with the transverse component of the attachment/detachment stroke.
It will thus be noted that, unlike the first embodiment, the complementary interlocking shapes of the attachment members 36, 38, i.e. the trough 62 and the retention end 66R of the slot 66, are, when the tool 24 is attached to the tool-holder 26, interlocked together.
If the two attachment members 36, 38 are considered in the configuration in which they are attached to one another (see
Moreover, when the tool 24 is attached to the tool-holder 26, the complementary centering surfaces 44, 46 are intercalated axially between the complementary vibrational coupling surfaces 32, 34 and the slide 38 forming the female attachment member. It will be noted that these complementary centering surfaces 44, 46 are optional.
The tool 24 is detached from the tool-holder 26, mutatis mutandis, by executing the stroke as the reverse of that which has just been described.
It will be noted that, as in the case of the first embodiment of the invention, the two attachment members 36, 38 do not deform during the attachment/detachment stroke.
Naturally, the axial and radial dimensions of the trough 62 and the retention end 66R of the slot 66 are adapted in order to allow the axial and radial deviations of the retention head 64 in the trough 62 resulting from the vibrational coupling/uncoupling stroke between the tool 24 and the tool-holder 26.
It will be noted that the stroke-guide and -limiting stud 70 allows correct positioning of the retention end 66R of the slot 66 relative to the trough 62 in order to prevent any undesirable contact between the male attachment member 36 and the slide 38 forming the female attachment member.
For the purposes of the satisfactory execution of the vibrational coupling/uncoupling and attachment/detachment stroke when the members 36, 38 are attached together, the kinematics of the various movable elements of the vibratory instrument according to the above-described embodiments require appropriate mechanical clearances, not all of which have been mentioned but which the person skilled in the art will be able to define in terms of position and dimension, particularly in light of that which has been described above.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1457091 | Jul 2014 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2015/052008 | 7/21/2015 | WO | 00 |