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Growing your own could replace falsies. 
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Grow-your-own to replace false teeth

Ian Sample, science correspondent
The Guardian, Monday 3 May 2004 09.31 BST
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The British institution of dentures sitting in a glass of water beside the bed could be rendered obsolete by scientists who are confident that people will soon be able to replace lost teeth by growing new ones.
Instead of false teeth, a small ball of cells capable of growing into a new tooth will be implanted where the missing one used to be.

The procedure needs only a local anaesthetic and the new tooth should be fully formed within a few months of the cells being implanted.

Paul Sharpe, a specialist in the field of regenerative dentistry at the Dental Institute of King's College, London, says the new procedure has distinct advantages over false teeth that require a metal post to be driven into the jaw before being capped with a porcelain or plastic tooth.

"The surgery today can be extensive and you need to have good solid bone in the jaw and that is a major problem for some people," Professor Sharpe said.

The method could be used on far more patients because the ball of cells that grows into a tooth also produces bone that anchors to the jaw.

The choice of growing a new tooth is likely to appeal to patients. "Anyone who has lost teeth will tell you that, given the chance, they would rather have their own teeth than false ones," said Prof Sharpe. The average Briton over 50 has lost 12 teeth from a set of 32.

The procedure is fairly simple. Doctors take stem cells from the patient. These are unique in their ability to form any of the tissues that make up the body. By carefully nurturing the stem cells in a laboratory, scientists can nudge the cells down a path that will make them grow into a tooth. After a couple of weeks, the ball of cells, known as a bud, is ready to be implanted. Tests reveal what type of tooth - for example, a molar or an incisor - the bud will form.

Using a local anaesthetic, the tooth bud is inserted through a small incision into the gum. Within months, the cells will have matured into a fully-formed tooth, fused to the jawbone. As the tooth grows, it releases chemicals that encourage nerves and blood vessels to link up with it.

Tests have shown the technique to work in mice, where new teeth took weeks to grow. "There's no reason why it shouldn't work in humans, the principles are the same," said Prof Sharpe.

His team has set up a company, Odontis, to exploit the technique, and has won £400,000 from the National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts and the Wellcome Trust.


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OT - anyone else think Ian Sample is a great name for a science journo?

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Sun Jan 03, 2010 6:19 pm
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Aren't stem cells brilliant.

I'm now Imagining the plot for a film based around the procedure going horribly wrong.

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Sun Jan 03, 2010 6:29 pm
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I'd pay for that for one of my teeth. I have one tooth that seems to have been really weak. All my other teeth are fine and doing really well but there is one tooth that has always done badly no matter what I do. I've had a root canal in it and various fillings and it is no slowly falling away from the fillings around the outside :(

If I could replace that with a new one I would do it. I'd actually prob get a loan to do it as it's so annoying.

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Sun Jan 03, 2010 6:36 pm
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Fogmeister wrote:
I'd pay for that for one of my teeth. I have one tooth that seems to have been really weak. All my other teeth are fine and doing really well but there is one tooth that has always done badly no matter what I do. I've had a root canal in it and various fillings and it is no slowly falling away from the fillings around the outside :(

If I could replace that with a new one I would do it. I'd actually prob get a loan to do it as it's so annoying.

Root canal kills the blood supply to the tooth, so it will inevitably become weak, discolour and slowly crumble away. Basically, it's dead now.

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Sun Jan 03, 2010 6:42 pm
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ProfessorF wrote:
OT - anyone else think Ian Sample is a great name for a science journo?


I think Yuri N. Sample would be better.


I'm all for this false teeth malarky as mine have only ever given me trouble, not that a new set of the same would be much better, although having them for longer would certainly be nice.

In the extended family I have what is known as a 'Tolly' tooth, where one of my front lower's is twisted. I wonder if the stem cell replacements would do the same?

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Sun Jan 03, 2010 7:27 pm
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This is just 8-)

In complete ignorance, what's the process for taking the stem cells from the patient, anyone know?

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Sun Jan 03, 2010 7:39 pm
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pcernie wrote:
This is just 8-)

In complete ignorance, what's the process for taking the stem cells from the patient, anyone know?


Best place that I've heard of is the umbilical cord. Now where did I leave that lying around. :lol:

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Sun Jan 03, 2010 7:46 pm
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