Positioning Handle and Occlusal Locks for Removable Prosthesis
20190201172 ยท 2019-07-04
Inventors
- Thomas J. Balshi (Gwynedd, PA, US)
- Johannes Petrus Michael Grobbee (Oosterbeek, NL)
- Stephen F. Balshi (Chalfont, PA, US)
- Glenn Wolfinger (Ft. Washington, PA, US)
Cpc classification
A61C13/34
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61C13/0004
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
The present invention discloses occlusal locks and positioning handles as part of an upper and/or lower denture or other prosthetic solution, the locks facilitating alignment construction and delivery of the conversion prosthesis, expediting the clinical procedure, and ensuring accurate alignment that improves the accuracy of rapid tooth replacement procedures.
Claims
1. A dental prosthesis comprising: an upper portion having an posterior area, an anterior area and a tooth area; a lower portion having an posterior area, an anterior area and a tooth area; a lock for securing the upper or lower portion of the dental prosthesis to an opposite one of the lower and the upper portion of the prosthesis, wherein the lock portion includes: a male portion located towards the posterior area of a first one of the upper and the lower portions of the dental prosthesis, the male portion projecting away from first one of the upper and the lower portions to an opposing arch of a second one of the upper and the lower portions of the prosthesis; a female portion located towards the posterior area of the second one of the upper and the lower portion distally of the tooth area thereof, the female portion having a complementary structure to receive the male portion thereby joining the upper portion and the lower portion to achieve a desired tooth alignment and occlusion.
2. The prosthesis in claim 1, wherein the male portion and female portion of the prosthesis are located distally of the tooth area of the prosthesis.
3. The prosthesis in claim 2 wherein the male portions are located in a base portion of and upper or lower portion of the prosthesis.
4. The prosthesis in claim 1, wherein the male portion is located on at least one tooth and/or the female portion of the prosthesis is located on at least one tooth.
5. The prosthesis in claim 1, wherein the male portion is a projection from the first one of the upper and lower portion of the prosthesis and the female portion is an existing tooth in the second one of the upper and the lower portion.
6. The prosthesis in claim 1, wherein the male portion is located in a base portion of an upper or lower portion of the prosthesis.
7. The prosthesis in claim 1 further comprising a handle located towards the anterior side, the handle being milled as part of the prosthesis.
8. The prosthesis in claim 7, the handle having a top side and a bottom side and extending distally in an anterior direction from the prosthesis.
9. The prosthesis in claims 1 being milled from a digital denture design.
10. An upper and lower set of full dentures for a dental patient comprising: a first arch of the denture, a second arch of the denture being in occlusal opposition to the first arch; a locking portion securing a first arch of the denture to the second arch of the denture, the locking portion positioned at a first arch, to a receiving portion of the second arch, whereby a dentist may align the first arch and second arch to set an occlusion of the dental patient.
11. The upper and lower set of full dentures in claim 10, the receiving portion being at least one tooth on the second arch.
12. The upper and lower set of full dentures in claim 11, the locking portion comprising at least a partial positive mold of the receiving portion.
13. The upper and lower set of full dentures in claim 11, the locking portion emanating from at least one tooth towards an anterior side of the first arch, the locking portion forming a slight compression on the receiving portion.
14. The upper and lower set of full dentures in claim 10, the locking portion having a frictional fit into the receiving portion.
15. The upper and lower set of full dentures in claim 11, the locking portion comprising a first side, a second side, and a third side above the occlusal plane which work together to apply a slight compression against the receiving portion.
16. The upper and lower set of full dentures in claim 10 being milled from a digital denture design that is customized to the intra-oral anatomy of the dental patient.
17. The prosthesis in claim 10 further comprising a handle located towards the anterior side of the first arch and/or the second arch.
18. The prosthesis in claim 17, the handle having a top side and a bottom side and extending distally in an anterior direction from the first and/or second arch.
19. The upper and lower set of full dentures in claim 17 being milled from a digital denture design that is customized to the intra-oral anatomy of the dental patient.
20. The prosthesis in claim 7 being milled from a digital denture design.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
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[0016]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0017] The present invention provides a structure for facilitating precise alignment of removeable prosthesis during such procedures as Teeth-in-a-Day. The structure provides many advantages over the prior art. The occlusal locks, which are generally applied to the posterior areas of the prosthesis, give the clinician the ability to bring the entire dentition into maximum interocclusal relationship using the positioning handle to aid in moving the conversion denture into optimal position. This significantly reduces time required for occlusal adjustments. The occlusal locks tend to reduce the need for additional wax evaluations and new interim implant-supported prosthesis, which often are needed because of inadequate alignment of the conversion prosthesis at the initial construction intra-orally. The structure may further provide error prevention to the process of aligning an upper and/or lower prosthetic to an opposing arch.
[0018] According to embodiments of the invention shown in
[0019] Occlusal locks may be positioned distally of the tooth portion of the denture base so that tooth occlusion and alignment is unaffected by the locks, as seen in
[0020] For example, in
[0021] Occlusal locks may comprise a mating system 200 as shown in
[0022] In still another embodiment shown in
[0023] In another embodiment not depicted, the female and male portions may be switched in opposition so that the male portion is on the upper denture base and the female portion on the lower denture base. This embodiment may apply to any of the above embodiments that disclose a male and female portion.
[0024] In another embodiments not depicted, the mating system between the upper and lower denture bases may comprise alternative modes of connection. The male and female portions may have greater lateral profiles than depicted. They may include snap-fit mating structures, a gear-fit structure, or other geometric configurations known the arts to removably stabilize two objects.
Technique for Utilizing Inventive Occlusal Locks into a Teeth-In-A-Day Procedure
[0025] The following technique describes an exemplary utilization of the inventive occlusal locks in a popular, rapid tooth replacement procedure on a dental patient. Though other prosthetic devices such as crowns and partial dentures, or even double arch dentures are available for use with the inventive occlusal lock and positioning handle structures, a full arch denture for the maxilla arch of a dental patient is described as follows: [0026] 1. Make definitive impressions, physical or digital, and provide them to the dental laboratory with a prescription for the digital denture that will become the conversion or temporary denture. [0027] 2. In the dental laboratory, optically scan the impressions or pour stone casts made from the impressions and create a virtual articulation. Then, a digital tooth arrangement is designed. [0028] 3. Design the positioning handle and incorporate it into the production file for milling a monolithic denture 100, as depicted in