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| United States Patent | 4863383 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4863383.html |
| Inventor(s) | Grafelmann; Hans L. (Parkstrasse 105 D-2800, Bremen 1, DE) |
| Abstract | The implant for dental purposes comprises a socket (4) and is provided with
self-tapping screw threads, which are screwed into a pilot bore formed in
the jaw bone. The socket receives a post (10), which has a stem (13) and
is adapted to carry dental suprastructures. The stem (13) of the post is
provided at its inner end with male screw threads (16), which have been
screwed into female screw threads formed in the socket. In accordance with
the invention the crest diameter of the self-tapping screw threads is
equal throughout the axial length of said screw threads to the diameter of
the socket (4) at its outer end. The self-tapping screw threads are formed
on an axially inwardly tapering shank and continuously decrease in depth
to zero from the inner end of said self-tapping screw threads to the outer
end of the socket (4) or to a point which is spaced 2 to 3 mm from the
outer end of said socket. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4863383 |
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self-taping screw-in bone implant for dental purposes |
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| Publication Date |
September 5, 1989 |
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| Filing Date |
March 17, 1988 |
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| Priority Data |
Mar 17, 1987[DE]3708638 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| Market Size |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. In a self-tapping screw implant for fixing a post for anchoring a dental
suprastructure, comprising
a socket, which has at its outer end a circular outside rim and is formed
with an axially extending socket opening, which is open at said outer end,
and
a shank, which is integral with said socket and has a tip which is opposite
to said socket, wherein said shank tapers in the direction from said
socket to said tip and is formed with self-tapping screw threads having a
sharp-edged crest,
the improvement residing in that the diameter of said crest is not in
excess of the diameter of said outside rim at any point of the axial
length of said screw threads, wherein
the diameter of said crest is equal to the diameter of said outside rim
throughout the axial length of said screw threads.
2. The improvement set forth in claim 1, wherein the diameter of said crest
is constant throughout the axial length of said screw threads.
3. The improvement set forth in claim 1, wherein said screw threads have a
depth which continuously decreases to zero in the direction from said tip
to said outer end of said socket.
4. The improvement set forth in claim 3, wherein the depth of said screw
threads continuously decreases to zero from said tip as far as to said
socket.
5. The improvement set forth in claim 3, wherein the depth of said screw
threads continuously decreases to zero from said tip to a point which is
spaced about 3 mm from said socket. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a self-tapping screw-in bone implant for dental
purposes.
When posts are to be anchored for a fixation of dental suprastructures,
such as bridges or weblike stiffeners, implants are inserted or screwed
into a pilot bore, which has been drilled into the jaw bone. A screw-in
bone implant comprises a post-receiving socket and a tapering shank which
is integral with said socket and said implant is formed on its outside
peripheral surface with self-tapping sharp-edged screw threads having a
large lead. The socket has a socket opening formed with female screw
threads for threaded engagement with a post.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Implants of that kind are known from Published German Application No.
3,136,602 and have self-tapping screw threads on a tapered shank. The
screw threads have also a taper, which differs from that of the shank. The
shank of that known implant is small in diameter (about 2 mm) and its
screw threads have a large depth and a radius which increases
progressively from the tip. The bone portions which are displaced by the
screw threads during the tapping operation are received by the trabecular
framework of the laterally adjacent bone portions. That implant is
intended to be axially supported in the jaw by compact bone portions at
the tip of the shank. They are more suitable for spongious or cancellous
bone.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to provide an implant which is of the kind
described first hereinbefore and which will contact the bone around the
bore on a larger surface area and reliably to close the free annular space
between the bore-defining bone surface and the implant from the beginning
of the screwing operation and to preclude a permanent compression of the
bone by the screw threads.
It is a specific object of the invention to provide such an implant which
will establish a uniform contact between the bone and the bone implant in
a wide area from the very beginning of the insertion of the implant and
particularly in the region in which the implant emerges from the bone and
contacts the gingiva, i.e., in the upper portion of the bore which
receives the implant. In that region the bone may also be contacted by a
threadless polished annular surface of the implant in an axial length of 2
to 3 mm; that annular surface has the same diameter as the surrounding
portion of the receiving bore. The threads may also extend over the
complete implant or up to the region in which the implant emerges from the
bone, i.e., up to the socket entrance.
It is a further object of the invention to provide an implant of the kind
described which can be used in jaw regions in which an axial support of
the bone by compact bone portions at the tip of the shank cannot be relied
upon because the implant can be supported by its screw threads in the
laterally adjacent bone portions, particularly near the tip, even if they
are spongy. The immediate stabilization effect in compact bone substance
is easier to obtain due to the deeper threads in the opex region.
The objects stated above are accomplished in the implant in accordance with
the invention in that the crest diameter of the self-tapping screw threads
of the implant is not in excess of the diameter of the socket throughout
the axial length of said screw threads. The entire implant is like a
geometric cylinder including the threads outside diameter.
The entire implant preferably has a constant diameter throughout its
length. That shape is preferably achieved in that the depth of the screw
threads continuously decreases to zero in the direction from the tip of
the shank to the outer end of the socket.
Alternatively, the implant may have a slight taper toward the tip of the
shank.
The same object may be accomplished in a manner which is known from
published German Application No. 31 36 602 in that the self-tapping screw
threads are formed with indentations, which are angularly spaced less than
360.degree. in such a manner that the average number of recesses per
360.degree. is two. In that case the self-tapping screw threads do not
have in axial section the configuration of an isosceles triangle but that
side face of the screw threads which faces the tip of the shank includes
with the axis of the shank an angle not in excess of 90.degree. and the
other side face includes with the axis of the shank an obtuse angle of
about 120.degree..
The same object can be accomplished in that the core is formed with one or
more indentations, which extend into the apical-bicortical supporting tip
of the implant. The sharp shorter outer edge of said indentation or each
of said indentations defines a surface which faces in the sense in which
the implant is rotated as it is screwed into the bore.
The socket is formed with a hexagonal recess for engagement by a wrench
used to rotate the implant into the bore in the bone and at the bottom of
said recess is formed with a blind bore, which has female screw threads so
that a temporarily used post for promoting the healing or a cover screw or
at a later time, a permanent post, can be screwed into the socket. Said
posts are provided with male screw threads on a stem which extends through
the hexagonal socket opening.
The implant is screwed into the bore formed in the bone until the outer end
of the socket is flush with the outside surface of the surrounding bone or
protrudes 1 to 2 mm from said outside surface and the tip of the implant
contacts and may be axially supported by the adjacent surface of compact
bone, although such support at the tip is not essentially required. If a
temporary post is to be inserted, its length will be so selected that its
top surface is flush with the top surface of the adjacent gingiva.
Instead of a temporary post which protrudes from the socket of the implant
to the extent of the thickness of the gingiva, a more shallow cover screw
may selectively be used in known manner. That cover screw is formed at its
top with a slot, which is engageable by a screwdriver for screwing such
cover screw into and out of the socket. In that case the gingiva will grow
to completely cover the implant.
When screw-threaded implant posts which have been screwed in are finished
with burs which rotate in a clockwise sense, the engagement of the screw
threads may be loosened as a result of the vibration and under the action
of the finishing bur driven, e.g., by a right-turning air turbine, the
post will be unscrewed in a couterclockwise sense. In accordance with the
invention this can be prevented in that the female and male screw-threads
are left-handed.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 is an elevation showing an implant assembly embodying the invention
with a broken away socket and a screwed-in permanent post, which has
retaining grooves and a screwdriver slot. The cylindrical outside
peripheral surfaces at the butt joint between the post and the implant are
flush.
FIG. 2 is a perspective view showing the top end portion of the implant
with the hexagonal portion of the socket opening.
FIG. 3 is an elevation showing the partly cut screw threads on the shank.
FIG. 4 is a longitudinal sectional view showing the screw threads on the
shank on a larger scale than in FIG. 3.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
A preferred embodiment of an implant in accordance with the invention is
shown diagrammatically and partly in section on the drawing.
The implant shown in the drawing comprises a screw 1, which is formed with
sharp-edged screw threads 2 on a tapered shank 3. The shank 3 is integral
with a socket 4, on which the self-tapping screw threads 2 are continued.
In accordance with the invention the depth of the screw threads 2
continuously decrease to zero in the direction from the tip of the shank 3
to the outer end of the socket 4 so that the outside diameter of the
rod-shaped implant remains constant from its top to the inner end of the
screw threads 2.
A zero depth of the screw threads is reached 2 to 3 mm below the butt joint
14.
To facilitate the self-tapping operation, one or more indentations 5 are
formed in each convolution of the screw threads 2. For the same purpose
the shank 3 if formed in its tip portion with notches 6, each of which has
a sharp edge which extends generally in the longitudinal direction of the
shank and defines a surface that faces in the sense in which the implant
is rotated as it is screwed into the bore. The profile of the screw
threads 2 is shown in FIGS. 3 and 4. Those side faces 9 of the screw
threads which face the tip of the shank 3 are at right angles to the axis
of the shank and those side faces 7 which face the socket 4 include an
obtuse angle with said axis.
The post 10 comprises a stem 13, which at its inner end carries male screw
threads 16. The socket 4 has a socket opening 11, which has a non-circular
outer portion, which may be hexagonal as shown in the illustrated
embodiment, and which is engageable by a mating socket key. The socket
opening 11 comprises at its inner end a blind circular bore, which is
formed with female screw threads 12. The male screw threads 16 of the stem
13 of the post 10 are screwed into the female screw threads 12. Those
portions of the socket 4 and of the post 10 which abut at the joint 14
have cylindrical outside peripheral surfaces which are equal in diameter
and flush with each other.
To permit the post 10 to be secured in the socket 4, the stem 13 of the
post 10 is formed with recesses 15, 15' for receiving adhesive paste or
cement of the like, which will prevent a rotation of the post. For the
reasons stated hereinbefore the female screw threads 12 and the male screw
threads 16 of the stem 13 may be left-handed.
The socket 4 has at its outer end a circular outside rim, which is adjoined
by a threadless cylindrical outside peripheral surface having an axial
width of 2 to 3 mm. The socket 4 tapers from said cylindrical outside
surface to the shank 3. The self-tapping screw threads 2 terminate at said
cylindrical outside surface.
The novel screw implant disclosed hereinbefore affords the following
advantages:
It is not necessary to insert the implant in the manner which is usual with
the conventional implants, i.e., to drill such a bore into the bone so
that only the crests of the screw threads will contact the bone surfaces
defining the bore, or to initially drill a narrow pilot bore, which is
then enlarged to a diameter which will permit the larger screw threads to
cut into the bone, or to use a thread cutter instrument to pre-cut the
threads in the bone.
The implant will easily be self-tapping even in a high-crest bone, in which
an inherently fixed center line is required.
Because the post consists of a separate part, it is possible to fix the
post to the implant after the bone has healed around the implant. The post
which is subsequently attached can be selected from a large assortment.
Alternatively, a healing post can temporarily be attached to ensure that
the gingiva will be kept open during the healing time.
Because a post which is equal in diameter to the socket can be used with
the novel implant, it is possible to use only one caliber shaft drill that
relates to the outer implant diameter and the conical inside shank, which
results in an immediate and tight bore contact.
The special design of the screw threads ensures that the inserted implant
will gently compress and will adhere to the bone from the entrance of the
bore over a predetermined length, from the very first movement.
The special design of the screw threads will also result in a self-tapping
action at the beginning of the insertion and in an adhesion when the
implant has been fully inserted.
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Description  |
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