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Health See other Health Articles Title: New regenerative tooth fillings heal your teeth from the inside ScienceAlert... Scientists in the UK have developed a new material that can be inserted into teeth to repair and regenerate dentin - the hard, bone-like tissue that makes up the bulk of all teeth. Just like regular fillings, which are inserted into a tooth to block off spaces where bacteria could colonise, the new material is injected into the tooth and hardened with UV light. But once inside the pulp of the tooth, it actually encourages stem cells to proliferate and grow into dentin. "We have designed synthetic biomaterials that can be used similarly to dental fillings but can be placed in direct contact with pulp tissue to stimulate the native stem cell population for repair and regeneration of pulp tissue and the surrounding dentin," says lead researcher Adam Celiz, a therapeutic biomaterials researcher from the University of Nottingham. The technique just won second prize in the materials category of the UK Royal Society of Chemistrys Emerging Technologies Competition 2016, and while theres not a whole lot of information available about how it actually works, it appears to be a new form of 'pulp capping'. Pulp capping is a technique dentists use to try and stop dental pulp from dying. Pulp is one of the four major components of teeth, along with enamel, dentin, and cementum. The surface enamel is the hardest layer, and under that is the second hardest layer, dentin. Dentin is important because it surrounds and connects to the pulp of the tooth, which is made up of living connective tissue and cells called odontoblasts, and found in the middle of your tooth. The pulp is where your blood vessels, nerves, and connective tissue are found, so you really dont want to mess that up. Problems start when you get a cavity that eats away your enamel, dentin and cementum - a calcified substance covering the root of a tooth - and exposes the pulp. If dentists dont get in there fast enough with a protective pulp-capping substance (or if the procedure fails), youre looking at an expensive and painful root canal treatment. (Nooooo.) Right now, pulp capping materials are usually made of materials such as calcium hydroxide or Mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA), and they dont do anything other than protect, and around 10 to 15 percent of these fillings fail. Thats where the University of Nottinghams invention comes in. Their new pulp capping material is designed to stop pulp capping failure by encouraging the growth of more natural dentin to protect it. As Coby McDonald reports for Popular Science: "In in vitro testing, the fillings stimulated the proliferation and differentiation of stem cells into dentin, the bony tissue that forms the bulk of the tooth under the white enamel. The researchers believe that if used in a damaged tooth, those stem cells can repair the kind of damage that often comes from the installation of a filling. In essence, the biomaterial filling would allow the tooth to heal itself." As mentioned earlier, the team hasnt released a lot of information about their new material, and have yet to publish it in a peer-reviewed journal, so well have to be cautiously optimistic about it for now until we can see more information about exactly how it works, and how expensive it will be. But if it can save some poor souls from having to get root canal - or even worse, having to lose the tooth altogether - this could be a very, very good thing. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 5.
#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)
Dental fillings have come ahead by leaps and bounds since they figured out to eliminate amalgam fillings years ago. They use porcelain now, and this new filling which binds with the pulp of the tooth to regenerate the actual tooth is remarkable. ;)
Ive heard of porcelain crowns but not fillings. where can you get them?
#7. To: Artisan (#5)
Any good dentist you can find that has graduated from dental college in the last 20 years can tell you about them. If I had allowed my payee to send me to a Medicaid dentist, I would have another crown in my mouth. This guy was local and I rode the local taxi both ways. Not all dentists are equal. ;)
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