WebDental

Social network for dentists and dental professionals to share news and ideas.

Body’s Own Stem Cells Can Lead to Tooth Regeneration - The End of Dental Implants?

A technique pioneered in the Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine Laboratory of Dr. Jeremy Mao, the Edward V. Zegarelli Professor of Dental Medicine at Columbia University Medical Center, can orchestrate stem cells to migrate to a three-dimensional scaffold infused with growth factor, holding the translational potential to yield an anatomically correct tooth in as soon as nine weeks once implanted.

People who have lost some or all of their adult teeth typically look to dentures, or, more recently, dental implants to improve a toothless appearance that can have a host of unsettling psycho-social ramifications. Despite being the preferred treatment for missing teeth nowadays, dental implants can sometimes fail and develop other problems.

An animal-model study has shown that by homing stem cells to a scaffold made of natural materials and integrated in surrounding tissue, there is no need to use harvested stem cell lines, or create an environment outside of the body (e.g., a Petri dish) where the tooth is grown and then implanted once it has matured. The tooth instead can be grown “orthotopically,” or in the socket where the tooth will integrate with surrounding tissue in ways that are impossible with hard metals or other materials.

"These findings represent the first report of regeneration of anatomically shaped tooth-like structures in vivo, and by cell homing without cell delivery,” Dr. Mao and his colleagues say in the paper. "The potency of cell homing is substantiated not only by cell recruitment into scaffold microchannels, but also by the regeneration of periodontal ligaments and newly formed alveolar bone."


The work of Dr. Mao and his laboratory, however, holds manifold promise: a more natural process, faster recovery times and a harnessing of the body’s own potential to re-grow tissue that will not give out and could ultimately last the patient’s lifetime.

“A key consideration in tooth regeneration is finding a cost-effective approach that can translate into therapies for patients who cannot afford or who aren’t good candidates for dental implants,” Dr. Mao says. “Cell-homing-based tooth regeneration may provide a tangible pathway toward clinical translation.”

This study is published in the most recent Journal of Dental Research, the top-rated, peer-reviewed scientific journal dedicated to the dissemination of new knowledge and information on all sciences relevant to dentistry, the oral cavity and associated structures in health and disease.

Comments are appreciated!

Source and Photo Credit: Columbia University Medical Center




Views: 43

Tags: cells, dental, implants, news, periodontal, regeneration, scaffold, stem, tooth, webdental

Comment

You need to be a member of WebDental to add comments!

Join WebDental

Comment by cherie tschudi on June 17, 2010 at 10:15am
I remember about 5 years ago one patient collected stem cells from an extracted tooth. I have always wondered since then, why more people don't participate. Like anything else, most of the public most likely, need to have this technique tried and true. Fascinating , nonetheless !

WebDental Facebook Fan Page

Latest Activity

Robert Smith commented on Bestcare Lab's blog post Significance of Finding High End Clinical Laboratory for Proper Medical Care
"Wow, such a nice post. keep it on. It is really useful for patient as well as dentist also. "
4 hours ago
Ivan Alejandro Castro is now a member of WebDental
14 hours ago
Mustaq Shah posted a blog post

Invisible Braces, presenting a beautiful Smile for Your Face

I feel very happy to saying that “smile, you glance in a superior way” a smile is a path of communicating without saying any real words but it has an impact no words can match. Not only does the human being you smile at feel good but you by your own person sense in a superior way, glad, but most people hide that smile because they mixed up  by it due to having arranged in an improper teeth or gaps between their teeth and similar problems now we all know that braces can fix this problem but…See More
17 hours ago
Robert Smith commented on Cary Feuerman, DMD's blog post 'Massage Method' Quadruples Protection Against Tooth Decay
"  Thanks for such informative post. I found some relevant useful post  on Free Dentist Finer.com  Smile is good for health. So keep smile & leave long.  "
yesterday
Robert Smith posted a status
"Thaks"
yesterday
Marielaina Perrone DDS commented on Elliot Pearson's blog post Finding the Right Patients
"Nice post."
Sunday
Marielaina Perrone DDS commented on Elliot Pearson's blog post Using Social Media for Your Business
"Very important to know where you are going with marketing before beginning. It gets very expensive fast if you do not."
Sunday
Davinder is now a member of WebDental
Saturday

© 2012   Created by WebDental.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service