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| United States Patent | 4964770 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4964770.html |
| Inventor(s) | Steinbichler; Hans (Am Bauhof 4 8201, Neubeuern, DE);
Willer; Jurgen (Payerstrasse 30 7410, Reutlingen, DE) |
| Abstract | In a process of making artificial teeth horizontal or other contour lines
are generated on the ground tooth stump and on adjacent surfaces, said
lines are detected by optoelectronic means, the data which have thus been
acquired are used to compute the three-dimensional shapes of the tooth
stump and of the required artificial tooth, and an artificial tooth having
the shape which has thus been determined is then made by processes known
per se. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4964770 |
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Process of making artificial teeth |
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| Publication Date |
October 23, 1990 |
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| Filing Date |
July 12, 1988 |
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| Priority Data |
Jul 16, 1987[DE]3723555 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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We claim:
1. A process of making artificial teeth comprising,
generating horizontal or other contour lines on a ground tooth and on
adjacent surfaces,
acquiring data derived from said lines by optoelectronic means,
computing the three-dimensional shapes of the tooth and of the required
artificial tooth from said data in accordance with the formula
I=a.times.(1+m.times.cos .theta.) (1)
wherein:
I=intensity
a=background brigthness
m=contrast
.theta.=angle,
and
forming an artificial tooth having the required shape as determined by said
data.
2. A process according to claim 1, characterized in that the horizontal or
other contour lines are generated by a projection process.
3. A process according to claim 1, characterized in that the horizontal or
other contour lines are recorded with utilization of the moire effect.
4. A process according to claim 1, characterized in that the horizontal or
other contour lines are generated by shadow projection.
5. A process according to claim 1, characterized in that the horizontal or
other contour lines are generated by interferometry by means of a laser.
6. A process according to claim 1, characterized in that the lines are
recorded by means of a video camera.
7. A process of making artificial teeth comprising,
generating horizontal or other contour lines on a ground tooth and on
adjacent surfaces,
acquiring data derived from said lines by optoelectronic means,
computing the three-dimensional shapes of the tooth and of the required
artificial tooth form said data, in accordance with the formula
I=a.times.(1+m.times.cos .theta.) (1)
I.sub.2 =a.times.(1+m.times.cos (.theta.+.theta..sub.2)), and (2)
I.sub.3 =a.times.(1+m.times.cos (.theta.+.theta..sub.3)), (3)
wherein
I, I.sub.2, I.sub.3 =intensity,
a =background brightness
m =contrast
.theta., .theta..sub.2, .theta..sub.3 =angle,
and
forming an artificial tooth having the required shape as determined by said
data.
8. A process according to claim 7, characterized in that the horizontal or
other contour lines are generated by a projection process.
9. A process according to claim 7, characterized in that the horizontal or
other contour lines are recorded with utilization of the moire effect.
10. A process according to claim 7, characterized in that the horizontal or
other contour lines are generated be shadow projection.
11. A process according to claim 7, characterized in that the horizontal or
other contour lines are generated by interferometry by means of a laser.
12. A process according to claim 7, characterized in that the lines are
recorded by means of a video camera. |
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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 process of making artificial teeth.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In the previously conventional process of making artificial teeth, the
clinical conditions in the mouth of the patient are reproduced in that
impressions are taken and are used to make patterns. A process of making
artificial teeth must ensure that the artificial teeth which are made will
exactly fit because such exact fit is required for a safe anchoring and a
permanent retention of the artificial teeth or the dentures comprising
such teeth so that all tissues which are involved in the chewing operation
will be able to take up the physiological loads without suffering damage.
All operations performed by the dentist and all operations which are
subsequently performed by the dental technician in the making of
artificial teeth are performed by methods which have been used for decades
and will now briefly be described with reference to the provision of an
individual crown:
(1) An impression from the tooth stump which has been prepared is taken by
means of a rubber-elastic or hydrocolloidal impression-taking material;
(2) The tooth stump is temporarily protected;
(3) A superhard gypsum is cast into the impression and a working pattern as
well as a counterbite pattern are made;
(4) The patterns are installed in an articulator;
(5) An artificial crown is cast from metal in a mold prepared by means of a
wax pattern,
(6) The casting is fitted on the tooth stump in the mouth and the
artificial crown is finally fixed.
That conventional making of artificial teeth from metal or other materials
requires a large number of operations to be performed by the dentist and
the dental technician. Said operations involve a risk of a large number of
inaccuracies and errors so that an exact fit of the artificial tooth or
teeth may not be obtained and the operations may have to be repeated.
These disadvantages may be due to properties of the materials employed,
such as the tendency of gypsum to expand and the tendency of metal to
shrink, but may also be due to improper work and to difficult conditions
in the mouth.
For some time it has been endeavored to replace the conventional taking of
an impression and the succeeding operations by other techniques, which
depend on the use of mechanical or optical three-dimensional measuring and
scanning means. The informations which have thus been obtained are stored
and are delivered to control devices of numerically controlled machine
tools which have already been introduced for general machining operations.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,182,312 illustrates a mechanical scanning to obtain
information on three-dimensional surfaces of teeth and surrounding tissue
directly from the patient. For that purpose a probe is moved by the
dentist in the patient's mouth. But inaccuracies will always be involved
in mechanical scanning.
In the process described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,861,044 a cavity of a tooth is
photographically recorded and the dentist shapes a filling body of wax to
give it the desired final shape.
In the method described in European Patent 0.054 785, corrections of shape
are also required before the fit is as exact as is required. Before such
shaping, the three-dimensional and topographic shape of surfaces of organs
of the body is optically detected without contacting them.
In the process disclosed in European Patent 0 040 165 it is endeavoured to
obtain data of a prepared tooth stump by holographic interferometry and to
transmit such data. Light that is generated by a laser is subjected to
optoelectronic processing and the resulting data are delivered to a
computer. Whereas that process has been described in European Patent 0 040
165, such process has not yet been performed in practice.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to provide for the making of artificial
teeth a simple and fast process which can be performed in practice.
In accordance with the invention that object is accomplished in that
horizontal or other contour lines are generated on the ground tooth stump
and on adjacent surfaces, said lines are detected by optoelectronic means,
the data which have thus been acquired are used to compute the
three-dimensional shapes of the tooth stump and of the required artificial
tooth, and an artificial tooth having the shape which has thus been
determined is then made by processes known per se.
In the process in accordance with the invention, horizontal or other
contour lines must be generated on the tooth stump. From the process
described in European Patent 0 040 165 the invention basically differs in
that an optical method is used to generate horizontal or other contour
lines.
The shape of the ground teeth stump and the shape of the adjacent and
antagonistic teeth are represented by horizontal or other contour lines,
which by methods known per se are generated, e.g., by projection, or are
detected with utilization of the moire effect.
In the projection method, contour lines, i.e., lines representing the
external shape of the tooth stub, are generated projection (FIG. 1). The
contour lines may be generated by interferometric methods performed by
means of a laser or by shadow projection. To utilize the moire effect, the
tooth stump is illuminated through a grating by means of a television
camera which is spaced from the light source. The superposition of the
shadow pattern projected on the tooth stump and of the image of the
grating will result in the generation of a moire pattern, which represents
the contour of the tooth stub (FIG. 2).
The contour lines may be detected by means of a video camera either
directly or by means of optical glass fibers.
The contour line data are processed in an image processing system. That
processing differs from line-tracking programs in that the processing is
based on an intensity measurement, which can easily be performed by a
television camera. Intensity data for all picture elements are contained
in the video signal.
The computed contour data can then directly be transmitted to a numerically
controlled milling machine for making artificial teeth which are an exact
fit. The artificial teeth may be permanently fixed or may be removable.
The advantage afforded by the process in accordance with the invention
resides in that shapes of a tooth stump, the adjacent teeth and the
antagonistic teeth can be optically detected and the resulting data can
immediately be evalutated and used for a computation of the shape of the
required artificial tooth. The process can be preformed quickly and in a
simple manner in practice. The artificial tooth is made immediately
without a need for an interval of time and for a making of contact
impressions. As a result, the artificial tooth or teeth can be made and
inserted during one visit.
In accordance with a desirable optional feature of the invention, at least
three different patterns of horizontal or other contour lines are
generated. In that case the artificial tooth or teeth can be made fully
automatically.
The computation of the three-dimensional shapes of the tooth stump and of
an artificial tooth is computed in accordance with the formula
I=a.times.(1+m.times.cos .theta.) (1)
wherein
I=intensity
a=background brightness
m=contrast
.theta.=angle
The intensity I can be measured and in a recording with a video camera will
be determined for each picture element. In a video picture consisting,
e.g., of 512.times.512 picture elements, information on the intensity of
eahc picture element can be retrieved from the video signal. Three unknown
variables remain in the equation and consist of the background brightness
a, the constrast m and the angle .theta., which the quantity that is to be
found. When the angle .theta. has been determined for each picture
element, the vertical coordinate (Z coordinate) can be calculated from
that angle .theta. for each picture element because the vertical or Z
coordinate is a function of .theta.. When the vertical or Z coordinate has
been determined for each picture element by its X and Y coordinates, the
three-dimensional shape of the tooth and of the artificial tooth has been
determined. It will be understood that the vertical coordinate must be
computed for each point that is defined by its X and Y coordinates. For
that purpose it will be necessary and sufficient to compute the angle
.theta. for each picture element defined by its X and Y coordinates. This
will not be possible with the aid of equation (1) alone because it
contains three unknown quantities, so that three equations will be
required. In order to obtain said three equations, the pattern of
horizontal or other contour lines must be displaced by a predetermined
distance so that a pattern of horizontal or other contour lines will be
generated which differs from the first pattern. That second pattern will
be defined by the equation:
I.sub.2 =a.times.(1+m.times.cos (.theta.+O.sub.2)) (2)
The angle .theta..sub.2 resulting from the displacement is known because it
is a function of the displacement of the lines. The unknown quantities a,
m and .theta. are again contained in equation (2). The pattern of
horizontal or other contour lines is then displaced once more. Whereas
said vertical displacement preferably amount to one-fourth to one-third
the line spacing of the grating, other well-defined displacements may be
selected. The third pattern is defined by the equation:
I.sub.3 =a.times.(1+m.times.cos (.theta.+.theta..sub.3)) (3)
The angle .theta..sub.3 is known too because it is predetermined. The set
of equations (1), (2) and (3) can now be used to compute the unknown
quantity .theta. and the vertical coordinate Z for each picture element.
When said method has been performed for each picture element, the entire
three-dimensional shape has been computed.
With the aid of the method which has been described hereinbefore and which
involves a "phase displacement" or a "displacement of lines", the
artificial tooth or teeth can be made fully automatically. If only a
single pattern of horizontal or other contour lines is detected and
evaluated, it will be necessary to indicate by a manual entry the
direction in which upper horizontal contour lines are spaced from lower
ones and the direction in which lower horizontal contour lines are spaced
from upper ones and also to indicate by a manual input the regions in
which shadows or fissures are disposed. It will be understood that the
process in accordance with the invention will give satisfactory results
even when only a single pattern or horizontal or other contour lines has
been generated but it will then be necessary to indicate by a manual entry
the direction in which higher horizontal contour lines are spaced from
lower ones and the regions in which shadows and fissures are contained.
Such manual input may be effected by means of an interactive display
terminal.
A manual entering of such additional information will not be required if
three different patterns of horizontal or other contour lines are
generated. In that case the Z coordinates for each picture element defined
by its X and Y coordinates can be computed with the aid of the three
equations (1), (2) and (3). No information will then be required on the
direction in which higher horizontal contour lines are spaced from lower
ones. The shadows and fissures can be detected in that case by the fact
that they always appear at the same locations in the pictures of the three
different patterns.
For a determination of the contour, at least three pictures are entered
into the computer and the line pattern is displaced by a predetermined
distance between the entry of each picture and the next. It will then be
possible definitely to compute the contour from the amount of the
displacement and the change of the intensity at each picture element.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 illustrates the generation of contour lines by projection.
FIG. 2 illustrates the recording of contour lines with utilization of the
moire effect.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Illustrative embodiments of the invention will now be described in further
detail with reference to the accompanying drawing.
In accordance with FIG. 1, a projector 1 emits light rays, which are
incident on a diffraction grating 2, which has horizontal opaque areas and
horizontal light-transmitting areas 3, which have a predetermined and
preferably equal spacing. As a result, light rays are emitted from the
grating 2 in parallel horizontal planes 4 and are incident on the tooth
stump 5, on which they generate horizontal contour lines 6. The horizontal
contour lines 6 generated on the tooth stump 5 are recorded by a
television camera 7, which delivers corresponding signals to a monitor and
to a computer 9. The horizontal contour lines 6 can be displayed by the
monitor 8, as is indicated at 10. From the intensity values for each of
the picture elements of the monitor the computer 9 computes the
three-dimensional shape of the tooth stump 5. The picture of the monitor
may consist, e.g., of 512.times.512 picture elements.
If only a single picture of horizontal contour lines is to be recorded, it
will be necessary to furnish the computer with the information indicating
the direction in which the higher and lower portions of the tooth stump
are spaced apart as well as with an indication of the areas in which
shadows and/or fissures are disposed.
In a fully automatic system, a phase displacement or a displacement of
lines is required. A picture of certain horizontal contour lines is
recorded first. The projector 1 is then displaced by a well-defined
vertical distance at right angles to the projection axis II, e.e., at
right angles to the planes 4. That vertical distance preferably amounts to
about one-fourth to one-thrid of the line spacing of the grating, i.e., of
the spacing of the light-transmitting areas 3 of the grating 2. As a
result, a second pattern of lines, which has been displaced from the
first, is generated on the tooth stub 5 and is recorded by the television
camera 7. That recording is repeated after a second displacement of the
pattern of lines. As a result, information on three different patterns of
horizontal contour lines is entered into the computer 9, which can fully
automatically compute the three-dimensional shape of the tooth stump from
that information. The shadows and/or fissures will be detected because
they are disposed in the same areas in all three pictures whereas the
horizontal contour lines are displaced. As a result, the computer 9 can
automatically omit the data on said shadows and/or fissures in its
computation.
When only a single picture of horizontal contour lines is recorded it will
be necessary to furnish the computer 9 with additional information on the
direction in which upper regions are spaced from lower ones and on the
locations of any shadows and fissures. Such information can be entered by
means of an interactive display terminal used as the monitor 8.
FIG. 2 shows the recording of contour lines with utilization of the moire
effect. A light source 21 emits light rays, which are incident on a
diffraction grating 22, which consists of opaque areas and
light-transmitting strips (lines) 23, which are parallel to each other and
are spaced a well-defined, preferably uniform distance apart. The plane of
the grating is at right angles to the axis 24 of the tooth stump 5. The
light emitted by the grating generates contour lines on the tooth stump 5.
Only one of said contour lines is shown in FIG. 2. The television camera 7
is located at a distance from the light source 21. In that arrangement the
tooth stump 5 is illuminated through the grating 22 and is viewed by the
television camera 7 through the same grating. The projected shadow pattern
(contour lines 25) on the tooth stump 5 and the picture of the grating 22
are superimposed on each other in the camera 7 so that a moire pattern is
generated, which describes the contour of the tooth stump 5. That moire
pattern can be displayed by the monitor 8 as is indicated by lines 26. The
television camera 7 is connected to the monitor 8 and to the computer 9.
The method illustrated in FIG. 2 differs from that of FIG. 1 only in that
contour lines are generated by projection in the method of FIG. 1 and are
recorded with utilization of the moire effect in the method of FIG. 2. For
this reason the description given in connection with the method of FIG. 1
is also applicable to the method illustrated in FIG. 2.
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Description  |
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