Regenerating Teeth!

El_Machinae

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This is a huge discovery.

Last year we started actual work on spinal repair. Just ten years ago, we thought repairing nerve networks was impossible.

Now teeth. Once the technology cheapens, can you imagine how useful it would be to replace teeth? Heck, *I* have a couple bad teeth!

Source

Smile! A new Canadian tool can re-grow teeth say inventors
Jun 28 4:45 PM US/Eastern

Snaggle-toothed hockey players and sugar lovers may soon rejoice as Canadian scientists said they have created the first device able to re-grow 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.

"Right now, we plan to use it to fix fractured or diseased teeth, as well as asymmetric jawbones, but it may also help hockey players or children who had their tooth knocked out," Jie Chen, an engineering professor and nano-circuit design expert, told AFP.

Chen helped create the tiny ultrasound machine that gently massages gums and stimulates tooth growth from the root once inserted into a person's mouth, mounted on braces or a removable plastic crown.

The wireless device, smaller than a pea, must be activated for 20 minutes each day for four months to stimulate growth, he said.

It can also stimulate jawbone growth to fix a person's crooked smile and may eventually allow people to grow taller by stimulating bone growth, Chen said.

Tarek El-Bialy, a new member of the university's dentistry faculty, first tested the low-intensity pulsed ultrasound treatment to repair dental tissue in rabbits in the late 1990s.

His research was published in the American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics and later presented at the World Federation of Orthodontics in Paris in September 2005.

With the help of Chen and Ying Tsui, another engineering professor, the initial massive handheld device was shrunk to fit inside a person's mouth.

It is still at the prototype stage, but the trio expects to commercialize it within two years, Chen said.

The bigger version has already received approvals from American and Canadian regulatory bodies, he noted.

In other news: the University of Alberta just opened their Institute of Nanotechnology, too.
 
I have a bad feeling that tooth care will become ever more neglected. While the technology is certainly *beneficial* in its own right, I keep having a premonition that we're reaching some sort of tipping point where spoiled people care less and less about the world because "oh, the eggheads will keep it running as long as I pay them".

Nice article.
 
It's a selection process, where the cautious person wins.

If the careless help push this technology (by not taking care of their teeth, and paying to have them repaired), then the technology will progress and cheapen. If you take care of your teeth, then by the time you need the technology, the technology will be much more advanced compared to today.

I'm starting to think of smokers in the same way. I wonder how much faster our cancer research has sped up because of smoking? As a non-smoker, I benefit. Maybe. Unless I'm applying the broken window fallacy (and not factoring in the damage to our economy that smoking does).

Still, can you imagine a device that causes teeth to grow? Because, before today, I hadn't.
 
El_Machinae said:
Still, can you imagine a device that causes teeth to grow? Because, before today, I hadn't.
Not this way - I had imagined taking cell samples from the mouth, growing a tooth and reinserting it, rather than growing it directly in the mouth.

El_Machinae said:
If the careless help push this technology (by not taking care of their teeth, and paying to have them repaired), then the technology will progress and cheapen. If you take care of your teeth, then by the time you need the technology, the technology will be much more advanced compared to today.
Yes, but I would wish that we didn't *need* the technology in the first place.
http://www.worldwidehealthcenter.net/articles-11.html
I brush my teeth regularly, but I've sometimes gone for weeks without brushing them, and since I eat very little sugar, my gums didn't even bleed when I went back to brushing daily.

El_Machinae said:
I'm starting to think of smokers in the same way. I wonder how much faster our cancer research has sped up because of smoking? As a non-smoker, I benefit. Maybe. Unless I'm applying the broken window fallacy (and not factoring in the damage to our economy that smoking does).
I think you're applying a little of the broken window fallacy, but it's also the carelessness wrt broken windows. Take a look at this:
Tooth enamel is the hardest substance in human beings, together with bones. We have found teeth that have been on the earth for 100,000 years and still intact despite heat and cold, rain, snow, bacteria, etc. However, white sugar is capable of destroying tooth enamel within hours, penetrating the structure of the tooth-tissue like a nail and breaking it down. What Nature could not do since the beginning of time, mankind has achieved in no time at all. He is the only being that destroys the nutrient value of his food before consumption.

I'd say it's more like we can repair windows cheaply, so we're getting more and more jaded about breaking them. There's a balance, of course, between the cost offset of cheaper window repairing compared to the cost of repairing the extra broken ones, but that's what I mentioned in my first post here; I think we're hitting the downward curve of that relation.

(Visualisation: For what value of X is [ (1-X)*(X) ] the largest?)
(Also: for low values of X, the equation is similar to [X], which only grows as X increases.)
(Lots of people think we're on the second, and that scares me when I think we're on the first.)
 
YEY, i always considered it one of the more obvious flaws in human nature to only have 2 sets of teeth.
 
Being an Albertan I can see great potential for this home grown discovery. Albertans have horrible teeth and can afford to buy new ones! :lol:
 
I had geneticly bad teeth so can I now buy someone elses remanufactored chumpers to replace all the teeth that were stripped out of head?
 
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