Smile! A new Canadian tool can re-grow teeth say inventors
June 28, 2006
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.