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| United States Patent | 3971133 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/3971133.html |
| Inventor(s) | Mushabac; David R. (18 Graham Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11206) |
| Abstract | A porcelain preform is ultrasonically shaped by a metal model of the
prepared tooth and by a metal model of the counter, both models acting as
ultrasonic drills. A wax preform having a porcelain front surface
congruent to the porcelain preform is used to provide indexing of the
porcelain preform. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 3971133 |
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Dental restoration |
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| Publication Date |
July 27, 1976 |
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| Filing Date |
October 29, 1974 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A set of paired preform teeth comprising:
a first subset of preform teeth, each having a deformable body portion, a
non-deformable front surface facing spaced from the proximal sides and
gingival surface, and a non-deformable biting surface facing,
a second subset of non-deformable preform teeth, each member of said second
subset corresponding to one of said first subset, said correspondence
including congruence between the front surface facing and biting surface
facing of corresponding preforms from said first and second subsets,
whereby, an impression model formed from a configuration including a member
of said first subset will properly hold and align the corresponding member
of said second subset for the purpose of drilling a socket in the member
of said second subset for placement on a prepared tooth and whereby the
adjustment of a member of said first subset on a prepared tooth will
provide a configuration from which the impression for holding the
corresponding member of said second subset can be made.
2. The set of paired preform teeth of claim 1 wherein:
each member of said first subset includes a non-deformable back surface
facing extending from the biting surface part way to the gingival surface
and spaced from the proximal side.
3. The set of paired preform teeth of claim 1 wherein said facing of said
first subset is porcelain and wherein said second subset is solid
porcelain.
4. The set of paired preform teeth of claim 2 wherein said facing of said
first subset is porcelain and wherein said second subset is solid
porcelain.
5. The method of preparing a dental prosthesis from a preform comprising
the steps of:
forming a positive model of the patient's prepared tooth and surrounding
area,
shaping a deformable preform that has been placed on the prepared tooth,
said deformable preform having a non-deformable partial facing,
forming an impression model of the shaped preform in place on the prepared
tooth, said impression including the area surrounding the prepared tooth,
placing a rigid preform in said impression, said rigid preform having a
facing congruent to said non-deformable partial facing of said deformable
preform, and
ultrasonically drilling the gum line side of said rigid preform in place in
said impression using said positive model of the prepared tooth as the
drilling tool to provide an intermediate product having a gingival contour
congruent to the prepared tooth contour,
whereby, the impression model will hold and align said rigid preform so
that said positive model tool will form a socket in said rigid preform to
permit fitting the rigid preform precisely over the prepared tooth in the
patient's mouth.
6. The method of claim 5 further comprising the steps of:
forming a positive model of the counter to the prepared tooth,
placing said intermediate product on said positive model of the prepared
tooth, and
ultrasonically drilling the bite side of said intermediate product in place
on said positive model of the prepared tooth using said positive model of
the counter as the drilling tool to provide a prosthesis having an
articulating surface that occludes with said counter.
7. The method of claim 5 wherein said rigid preform is porcelain.
8. The method of claim 6 wherein said rigid preform is porcelain.
9. The method of claim 5 wherein said rigid preform is a stock crown.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein said rigid preform is porcelain. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates in general to techniques and apparatus employed in
constructing the crown or bridge or other item used in dental restoration.
Known techniques of preparing and restorating crown are time consuming. Not
only do they take a considerable amount of the dentist's time but a great
deal of time is taken in the preparation of dies and models,
articulations, and in the making of articulations, prior to the step of
fabrication or cutting of the crown. More time is taken in a series of
fittings to provide a crown which occludes properly with the rest of the
teeth in the mouth, maintains correct margins and contacts and feels
comfortable to the patient. In addition, there is usually a great deal of
time between visits of the patient to the dentist during which period the
patient must wear a substitute temporary crown, while the steps for making
the final crown are proceeding.
Accordingly, the major purpose of this invention is to provide a much more
expeditious technique for preparing the crown and restoration for the
patient's tooth.
It is a related purpose of this invention to provide a technique which
reduces the number of visits required.
It is another purpose of this invention to provide a technique which, in
large part because of the saving of time, reduces the cost of preparing
the crown.
A major time consuming problem with the known techniques of preparing and
manufacturing a crown is in obtaining the desired dimensions and, more
importantly, the proper occluding of the biting surfaces of the crown with
the opposing teeth.
Accordingly, it is another important purpose of this invention to provide a
crown forming technique that will result in an improved accurate and
effective occluding, fitting of the crown with the surrounding and
opposing teeth.
It is a further particular purpose of this invention to achieve this
improved accuracy and improved occluding matching or fitting while at the
same time obtaining the objectives fo reducing a dentist's time, reducing
time lapse between visits and reducing total costs.
It is a further purpose of this invention to provide an improved method of
matching the crown color and shade to the patient's teeth.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
One embodiment employs a positive metal model of the prepared tooth (that
is, the tooth that has been cut down to the preferred form which is the
anchor on which the crown is positioned) and a positive metal model of the
counter (that is, a metal model of the tooth or teeth opposite from the
prepared tooth). These two metal models can be prepared from a wax or
alginate negative that is plated with a soft metal such as copper or
nickel to provide an accurate surface and which is then filled with
plastic. The removal of the wax or alginate leaves a metal plated die that
constitutes the metal model.
A porcelain and wax pre-form is selected from a set of wax pre-forms on the
basis of the best match to the space around the prepared tooth (that is,
the tooth to be capped or crowned). This porcelain wax pre-form is
inserted over the prepared tooth. A portion of the front positioned
surface of the pre-form is porcelain. The pre-form is positioned to
provide proper alignment of the porcelain front surface with the
surrounding teeth. The wax surfaces of the pre-form are shaped to aid in
this alignment. A plaster impression is then taken of the tooth having the
porcelain-and-wax pre-form on it. This plaster impression, when removed
from the teeth, will carry the wax pre-form with it. The wax pre-form is
then removed from the plaster impression. The plaster impression thus
provides a negative of the area around the prepared tooth. The wax
pre-form is replaced in the impression with a solid porcelain pre-form
that corresponds to the wax pre-form on the basis of both pre-forms having
an identical front surface.
The positive metal model of the prepared tooth and adjacent teeth is
aligned with this plaster negative model after the porcelain-wax pre-form
has been removed. This alignment is fixed and repeatable by mounting the
plaster impression in a nesting-fitting position with the metal positive
model. The metal positive model is fixed on a vertical slide so that it
can descend and mesh into the plaster negative model. (This metal positive
model and plaster negative model would mesh except for the porcelain
preform). The metal positive model of the prepared tooth is connected to a
source of ultrasonic energy and moved into a meshing relation with the
plaster negative model. This metal model acts as a cutting tool and drills
into the porcelain pre-form until the metal model meshes with the rest of
the plaster preform. Thus the core of the porcelain model as well as its
sides are drilled and shaped.
The drilled and shaped porcelain pre-form (which now is close to its final
crown shape) is placed on the metal model of the prepared tooth. The two
metal models (prepared tooth and counter) are next properly aligned with
one another. The counter metal model is now ultrasonically energized and
used as the cutting tool as it is brought into occlusion with the metal
model of the prepared and adjacent teeth. The counter shapes and drills
the contact area (articulating surface) of the opposing teeth. Depending
on the teeth involved, this articulating surface may be labial (front),
lingual (back) or occlusal.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a perspective illustration of a metal model of the prepared tooth
and surrounding teeth.
FIG. 2 is a perspective illustration of a metal model of the counter,
opposite from the prepared tooth.
FIG. 3 is an illustration of the set of wax pre-forms and the corresponding
set of porcelain pre-forms, illustrating the selection of a wax pre-form
to be placed over the prepared tooth.
FIG. 4 is a plaster impression in perspective. This plaster impression has
been cast from the wax pre-form adjusted to be in place on the prepared
tooth together with the teeth surrounding the wax pre-form. FIG. 4 shows
the porcelain pre-form aligned to be placed into the plaster impression in
the space made by the wax preform.
FIG. 5 illustrates the ultrasonic drillings of the gum line end (gingival
contour and prepared tooth shape) of the porcelain pre-form in place on
the FIG. 4 impression by use of the FIG. 1 model of the prepared tooth as
an ultrasonic cutting tool.
FIG. 6 illustrates the ultrasonic drilling in the occlusal fitting step,
with the porcelain pre-form in place on the FIG. 1 positive model of the
prepared tooth by use of the FIG. 2 model of the counter as an ultrasonic
cutting tool.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
With respect to terminology, the following will be used herein:
a. Model. A model is a positive three-dimensional duplication of the item
involved.
b. Impression. An impression is a negative three-dimensional duplication of
the item involved. A soft material is on a positive hard structure. After
the soft material hardens over its hard impressed structure, and after it
is separated.
c. Gingival. Gingival refers to the gum line. Thus, the gingival side of a
crown is the side closest to the gum line and is opposite from the incisal
edge or occlusal surface.
d. Incisal/Occlusal. This compound term refers to the biting edge of
anterior teeth, or surfaces of posterior teeth. The incisal surface is the
biting edge of the front teeth while the occlusal surface is the grinding
and chewing surfaces of the bicuspids and molars. The incisal/occlusal
side of a crown is opposite from its gingival side.
e. Lingual. The lingual side of a tooth is the back surface facing into the
mouth and thus is the surface adjacent to the tongue.
f. Proximal. The proximal edges of a tooth are those vertical edges on
sides closest to or touching adjacent teeth.
g. Labial/Buccal. This compound term refers to the front surface of a tooth
facing out of the mouth and thus is the surface closest to the lips or
cheek.
h. Restoration. This term is used herein to cover both crowns and
prostheses such as fixed and removable bridges.
With reference to the FIGS., all of which illustrate the same embodiment of
the invention, FIG. 1 illustrates a metal model 10 of the prepared tooth
12 and adjacent teeth 14. FIG. 2 illustrates a metal model 18 of the
counter.
The metal models 10, 18 shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 may be made alternatively by
(a) a technique wherein the prepared tooth and surrounding area, as well
as the counter, are directly scanned and the data fed through a computer
to operate a cutting tool that cuts into a soft metal to provide the
models, or (b) a technique wherein an impression of the areas involved are
scanned and a similar cutting operation performed, or (c) a technique in
which the surfaces of a plastic impression of the areas involved are
plated and the positive models formed therefrom. In this latter technique,
a wax or alginate cast of the prepared tooth and area is taken. That
impression is then plated with copper, nickel, silver or some soft metal
that provides an accurate duplication of the surface involved. After the
plating, the rest of the impression is filled with something like Mallot's
metal or plastic. The wax or alginate is then removed and the result is a
model that has on its outer surface the plating material of soft metal.
The same technique is used to make the metal model 18 of the counter. At
present, this latter technique is the preferred technique.
As illustrated in FIG. 3, this invention contemplates a set of wax
pre-forms 20 for each type of teeth from incisor to molar and a
corresponding set of solid porcelain pre-forms 22. Each wax pre-form 20
has a porcelain front surface 24, which surface 24 is known as the labial
or buccal surface. In addition, each wax pre-form 20 has the
incisal/occlusal surface covered in porcelain. Furthermore the pre-form 20
corresponding to the anterior (front) teeth have one-third of the lingual
surface covered in porcelain. An indexing knob of porcelain on the lingual
surface is identical in both wax pre-form 20 and solid porcelain pre-form
22. Only a portion of the front surface 24 is porcelain so that the wax
pre-form 20 can be shaped at the gingival and proximal contacts by the
dentist. From the set of wax pre-form 20 the dentist selects an
appropriate pre-form to be fitted over the prepared tooth in the patient's
mouth. The selection by the dentist is on the basis of size, shape,
contours and the color of the porcelain front surface 24. The dentist then
shapes and positions the wax pre-form as desired to provide a wax pre-form
crown with a front surface 24 that is predominately porcelain. To do this
the dentist may have to cut away part of the wax at the proximal and
gingival surfaces. He also has to heat the wax to soften it for placement
over the prepared tooth.
With this wax pre-form properly shaped and positioned on the patients
prepared tooth, the dentist casts a plaster impression of the wax pre-form
and surrounding teeth to provide the plaster impression 26 illustrated in
FIG. 4. The plaster impression 26 when removed from the teeth will carry
the wax pre-form 20 with it. The wax pre-form 20 is then removed from the
plaster impression 26 to provide the impression 26 as shown.
The plaster impression 26 shown in FIG. 4 looks substantially like a
plaster impression of a group of teeth in the mouth. However, the
impression 26a left by the wax pre-form 20 is in part the result of
manipulation by the dentist. This manipulation involves not merely the
positioning of the wax preform 20 so that the porcelain facing is properly
positioned and angled but also the heating and forming of the wax portions
of the wax preform 20 to provide a proper fit between adjacent teeth. As a
result the impression 26a left by the adjusted wax preform is likely to
differ somewhat from the configuration of the corresponding porcelain
stock preform 22. Thus, the dentist will normally have to scrape away a
portion of the sides and perhaps even of the back of the plaster in the
impression 26a left by the wax preform so that the porcelain preform 22
can be properly set in place. This procedure is a dental indexing
procedure and involves setting the front surface of the porcelain preform
22 completely flush against the corresponding surface of the impression
26a made by the front surface 24 of the corresponding wax preform 20. It
is these two surfaces (front surface of porcelain preform 22 and front
surface of wax preform 20) which have to be indexed correctly so that the
subsequent drilling steps will provide a properly fitting porcelain crown.
After the porcelain preform 22 has been indexed, it is removed from the
plaster impression 26 shown in FIG. 4 and the plaster impression 26 is set
in place in a tool holder. The metal model 10 of the prepared tooth and
surrounding teeth is then placed in proper engagement with its own plaster
impression 26 and the appropriate adjustments made in the supporting
members so that proper alignment and engagement between the positive model
10 and the negative model 26 is made.
Once properly meshed, the combined metal model 10 and plaster impression 26
are held in a tool holder, by means of a vertical articulator such as The
Fourier Dental Articulator (supplied by the Dentsply Company, Inc. of
York, Pennsylvania). The metal model 10 is then lifted out of mesh with
the plaster impression 26 while maintaining its alignment with the plaster
impression 26 so that when the model 10 is brought down it will be brought
back into proper engagement. The metal model 10 is then lifted vertically
and the porcelain preform 22 placed in the impression at 26a.
In order to obtain appropriate engagement and alignment, it is important to
have, as shown, a number of adjacent teeth 14 on either side of the
prepared tooth 12 included as part of the metal model 10 and as part of
the plaster impression 26. Three teeth 14 on either side of the prepared
tooth 12 has been found adequate to provide the required meshing and
consequent alignment.
A small procelain knob (not shown) on the lingual surface of both pre-forms
20 and 22 may be used to aid in the proper seating of the pre-form 22 in
the cavity.
Then as shown in FIG. 5, with the porcelain pre-form 22 in place, the metal
model 10 is brought down in continued alignment with the plaster
impression 26. As the metal model 10 is brought down, ultrasonic energy is
applied to the metal model 10 so that (with an appropriate pumice fed
between model 10 and impression 26) the model 10 acts as a cutting or
shaping surface to shape the porcelain pre-form 22. The prepared tooth
model 12 effectively drills out the inside of the porcelain preform 22 and
also serves to shape precisely, to a feather edge the contours and all
internal and gingival surfaces of the porcelain pre-form 22. The proximal
sides of the model adjacent teeth 14 serve to cut and shape the proximal
sides of the porcelain pre-form 22. In this fashion, by means of
ultrasonic energy, the model 10 becomes an ultrasonically powered tool
which shapes and forms the porcelain pre-form 22 so that it can be
properly placed on the patient's prepared tooth.
The result of the drilling step discussed above and illustrated in FIG. 5,
is an intermediate product that still requires some further shaping. This
further step, illustrated in FIG. 6, requires first aligning for proper
bite the metal model 10 and counter model 18. This is done without the
porcelain pre-form 22 in place. One way of aligning is by the usual wax
bite method of transferring an occlusal relationship from the mouth to the
models as in known in the profession when using an articulator device in
making a crown.
After such alignment the two models 10 and 18 are moved apart while
maintaining alignment and the intermediate product porcelain pre-form 22
is placed on the prepared tooth model 12. Then the counter model 18 is
brought toward the model 10 with ultrasonic energy applied to the counter
model 18. This ultrasonic energy causes the counter model to act as a
cutting and shaping tool which then completes the cutting and shaping of
the porcelain pre-form 22. As shown in the FIGS., the counter model 18 is
much less complete than is the prepared tooth and surrounding area model
10. The reason for this is that the counter model 18 only has to be
developed for enough of the opposing teeth to provide an appropriate bite
for meshing and to shape the incisal/occlusal edge of the porcelain
pre-form 22 together with whatever adjacent portions of the lingual (back)
and/or labial/buccal (front) parts of the pre-form 22 are in the way of
the counter teeth.
The above description is of an application of the invention to the
preparation of a crown. The invention can be employed in the preparation
of other prosthesis such as fixed and removable bridges.
In the claims the term tooth is used but it should be understood that there
may be more than one prepared tooth (as in a bridge) and that the
invention and the claims are not limited to the preparation of a crown
and/or prosthesis for just one tooth.
In the claim the term wax is used to refer to the malleable material of the
pre-form 20. It should be understood that other malleable materials may be
used and are the equivalent of wax.
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Description  |
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