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Canadian Scientists Regrow Teeth

54mc writes "APL reports that Canadian Scientists have created the first device able to regrow teeth and bones. The researchers at the University of Alberta in Edmonton filed patents earlier this month in the United States for the tool based on low-intensity pulsed ultrasound technology after testing it on a dozen dental patients in Canada."

14 of 220 comments (clear)

  1. This article has more details by nietsch · · Score: 4, Informative
    --
    This space is intentionally staring blankly at you
  2. Re:Inevitable Discovery by twistedsymphony · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm not a hockey fan so I don't remember the guys name but There was a famous player way-back-when that lost a few teeth. He became sort of the face of hockey at the time with his toothless grin and thus the stereotype.

  3. Horse Hockey! by wdkeeper1 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Horse hockey on the "growing a new tooth" thing, but I can see repairing damaged teeth, depending on the cause of the damage. You need the presence of odontoblasts, etc in order for a new tooth to grow. That guy Chen is an engineer, not a dentist. I'm thinking he doesn't really understand how teeth form and grow, so he's got high hopes for his invention. The root structure of teeth is covered in cementum and dentin, which are repairable, so it makes sense that teeth with root resorption may be fixed by the ultrasonic thing. But to completely grow new teeth, you'd have to have "tooth stem cells" in the area, and those stem cells would have to know what size and shape of tooth to form for that area. I don't see that one happening. I also don't see damaged enamel being fixed by this thing; once enamel is gone, it's pretty much gone.

    1. Re:Horse Hockey! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      RTFA. It was invented by a dentist in the 90's. The news here is that the engineer created a version small enough to be implanted in the tooth.

    2. Re:Horse Hockey! by asuffield · · Score: 4, Informative

      I also don't see damaged enamel being fixed by this thing; once enamel is gone, it's pretty much gone.

      I'm not sure about the rest, but this bit is wrong. Tooth enamel is worn down all the time by your teeth being used, both from abrasion and acidity; this is the normal way they are supposed to work. It is continually replaced by your body, through a chemical process based around your saliva that deposits minerals on the teeth from the outside. So long as the environment in your mouth is not acidic (ie, you haven't been eating sugary food recently) and your diet supplies all the necessary minerals (mostly calcium), fresh enamel will be deposited. Damaged enamel doesn't really need "fixing", you can just let it reform.

      The reason why people tend to think that it can't reform is because the process that grows the teeth in the first place can't be repeated - that deposits enamel in a completely different manner. Also, the reenameling process is quite slow and will only work if you don't snack on sugary things all day.

      The problem is when the tooth is damaged below the level of the enamel; this can't be regrown currently (and prevents the tooth from re-enameling over the top) because the damage from eating progresses faster than the tooth can heal. If the enamel has been worn through completely, damage to the tooth below is inevitable - that's when your dentist drills it out and fills it. If this invention can do something about that, it's a significant step forward.

  4. Re:What about bones illness? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 2, Informative

    IANAD (but I do have a Pharmacy degree). But most likely this could not be used to cure osteosarcoma, as stimulating growth of a cancer is probably not the best idea.

    As for osteoporosis, I would suspect stimulating growth is not the right way to go either -- the bones are there, it's the structure of the bone that is weakened. Exercise, calcium intake, Vitamin D intake, and sometimes Fosamax (slows down resorption of calcium) or hormone regimens (still experimental) are the treatments du jour.

    --
    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  5. Re:Inevitable Discovery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    I think you are talking about Bobby Clarke, the current GM of the Flyers. He had one of those great hockey smiles, where you could slide a puck between the gap in his smile. The photo you are thinking of I believe was when the Flyers won the cup in the 70's (he played there before becoming the GM).

    Oh, and it isn't a sterotype. There are very few pro players who haven't lost a few chicklets along the way. Between sticks, pucks, hard hits, solid boards, and fights, about the only players who aren't missing a couple are the goalies. Hard to imagine the goalies only started wearing ANY facial protection in the late fifties, early sixties.

  6. Re:Root canal? by schon · · Score: 2, Informative

    I wonder how this "treatment" copes with teeth that have been root canal filled.

    Saw this on the news last night - they said that it will repair root canals.

    About the only thing it won't do is regrow a tooth that's been removed - it needs cells to start with.

  7. Re:What about bones illness? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    If you read the abstract of the scientific paper TFA refers to, you'll see that the LIPUS (low-intesity pulsed ultrasound) device _significantly_ decreases resorption.

  8. Re:Coincidentally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Not exactly. Why do you think the British have bad teeth? Because they like it? Of course not. Its because their dentists' 'union' keeps the numbers of dentists in the country small, and the prices astronomical. Implant work can cost the same as a house.

    So I suspect that perhaps three of these devices will be allowed into the UK, for use on just a few ultra-rich patients. The rest of us will join the half-mile queues to sign on to a dentist when one of the few become available.

  9. Better Link, Article from Globe & Mail (Canada by geerbox · · Score: 3, Informative
  10. Not new exactly by TimmyDee · · Score: 3, Informative

    A few years ago, I broke both bones in my forearm -- the radius was broken so badly that I had pulverized a small portion of it so the two parts didn't line up exactly. They didn't notice this in the x-rays (and so couldn't cut into my hip as they hadn't gotten my authorization for that), so they tried artifical (read: cadaver) bone to regrow the spot. Didn't work.

    A few months later, they enrolled me in a trial of a similar sort of ultrasonic technology by which my bone should regrow. They had been getting a 94% success rate with fibias, but the arm was something new. Needless to say, I was one of those lucky minorities that didn't show any growth. Months later, I was back on the table with new bone being brought in from my hip. Six weeks after that, I was healed. While cool, there is certainly no replacement for real bone.

    --
    Per Square Mile, a blog about density
  11. Skeptibility of osgeek by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 2, Informative

    How about the fact that published papers have shown, since at least 1996, that ultrasound can accelerate bone growth.

    If it can accelerate bone growth, it seems a logical enough step for someone to experiement with teeth, and given that it's been ten years since bone growth was seen, why is teeth/jaw regeneration so hard to believe?

    Or is it just because you haven't heard of it, it can't be real?

    Did you also know that light acts simultaneously as both a particle and a wave, depending on how you examine it?

  12. Re:Inevitable Discovery by Thuktun · · Score: 2, Informative