Bad teeth?

Gonz

molṑn labé
Staff member
Grow new ones

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - We may not be very far away from a time when dentists offer to help people with damaged or missing teeth grow new ones, according to new research presented on Wednesday.

A series of presentations at a dental meeting demonstrate that techniques using stem cells and gene therapy to regenerate teeth are producing promising results, suggesting this technique may not be far off.

"I think it's looking like quite an exciting technology for the near future," said Dr. Tony Smith, editor of the Journal of Dental Research, who was not involved in any of the newest studies.

Smith explained that the presentations describe techniques that enable dentists to coax existing teeth into repairing and regenerating themselves, and techniques where dentists can "start from scratch."


Clearly, techniques that involve adding new tissue to already-existing teeth are "probably a bit closer on the horizon," perhaps within a "handful of years," Smith predicted. Techniques that grow teeth from scratch will likely take at least another 10 years to perfect, he added.


In some instances, researchers are trying to reprogram cells in the mouth to behave like tooth-growing cells, convincing them they have to produce new teeth, Smith explained.


Other techniques being explored involve using stem cells, which have the potential to become any type of cell or tissue. In one study being presented at the meeting, researchers successfully extracted stem cells from the pulp of adult teeth, Smith said. The next step is to examine whether it's possible to use these teeth to regenerate new dental tissue, he said.


Other research being unveiled describes tests of different approaches to select stem cells from pulp, and all shows "different degrees of success," Smith said.


These techniques may one day help people whose teeth have decayed from very bad cavities, who have lost teeth in an accident, or whose teeth have worn down from acid or hard brushing, among other conditions, he predicted.


The findings are being presented Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday during the 83rd General Session of the International Association for Dental Research in Baltimore, Maryland.





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tommyj27 said:
maybe they can use stem cells to correct the gap between my two front teeth.
Stem-cells? Nah...try Brace-cells :D

I remember posting about this in relaiton to Japan or Tiawan...can't remember. In either case...it's one of the many interesting things that stem-cells can be used for.

I still think that regrowing a replacement heart or fixing damaged nerves, brain etc...is a more worthwhile use of the limited stem-cell lines, but some idiot with too much money and not enough sense (brush your f'n teeth f'r crissakes!)will have to pay for more research :D
 
me too
bad%20teeth.jpg
 
I've got replacement teeth in stock for that. ;)
Actually I have teeth for my mouth too, but I can't stand to wear dentures/partials. :(
I need to grow some. :nerd:
 
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