Dental Newsflash

Chapped lips are a dehydration problem.  When you lick them, you momentarily apply moisture, which then evaporates and leaves your lips feeling drier than before. Besides, saliva contains digestive enzymes that don't do your sore lips any good.  Licking chapped lips can lead to something called lip-licker's dermatitis.

Stem Cells for Future Health PDF Print E-mail
Articles by Dr Logan - What to do
Written by Dr. Scott Logan   
Thursday, 23 April 2009 12:54

Baby and wisdom teeth, along with jawbone and periodontal ligament, are non-controversial sources of stem cells that could be "banked" for future health needs, according to a National Institutes of Health researcher.

Harvested from the pulp layer (an area where there are nerves and blood vessels) inside the teeth, jawbone and periodontal ligament, these stem cells may one day correct periodontal (gum) defects and cleft palate.  The stem cells have the potential to save injured teeth and grow jawbone. Regenerating an entire tooth is on the horizon, and years from now stem cells from teeth and jawbone might be used to correct cleft palate, one of the most common birth defects, sparing children multiple surgeries.

I know I’m making you kick out some cobwebs from your old science classes, but as long as a cell has a nucleus, anything is possible.  In time, individuals may be able to bank their own stem cells from baby and wisdom teeth, similar to the way umbilical cord blood is stored. At present, commercial facilities to store stem cells from teeth are not available.

According to Dr. Robey, who conducted the study, the viability of stem cells derived from baby teeth is determined by when the tooth comes out. The longer a loose tooth is left in the mouth to fall out on its own, the less viable it is as a source of stem cells.  As research in the field progresses, hopes are that stem cells from baby and wisdom teeth may one day even restore nerve cells damaged by diseases such as Parkinson's Disease, one of the most common neurological disorders affecting the elderly.

The stem cells from jawbone and teeth share a common origin with nerve tissue.  With the proper cues, researchers may be able to encourage them to form nerve-like tissue which may restore cells that make dopamine.  Dopamine is a brain chemical that nerve cells need to properly function.  To extract the stem cells from teeth, researchers can remove the periodontal ligament, drill into the tooth to remove the crown and then extract the pulp which is placed in an enzyme solution to release the stem cells. From jawbone, cells can be isolated by collecting marrow following a tooth extraction, for example, or by biopsy.

 

Dr. Robey outlined three approaches presently being investigated by different laboratories to implant stem cells from teeth in humans:

Place the stem cells into a mold of a tooth crown made of an enamel-like substance along with "scaffold" material. Loop blood vessels through this "construct" and implant it elsewhere in the body until it matures. Then, extract it and implant it in the mouth. For instance, researchers have already been able to use bone marrow to grow the jaw bone of a man in his shoulder blade until it was mature, then they extracted it and attached it to his jaw.
Harvest a wisdom tooth, release the stem cells from the dental pulp then implant the cells directly into a severely injured tooth. For example, if teeth are seriously injured in a car accident, usually root canals are needed and the teeth die. Instead, using stem cells, the goal is to regenerate the pulp inside the teeth. "It would be like bringing the teeth back to life, sparing them root canals.
Lastly, if no tooth is present (whether by accident, severe dental disease, or a genetic condition such as cleft palate) researchers can take stem cells from unerupted wisdom teeth, organize them into appropriate three-dimensional structures, and give them the proper “cues” before putting them back into the socket where the tooth would be, like planting a seed in a garden and waiting for a plant—in this case a tooth—to grow.
It may be years before research in the field reaches the point where it would be practical for people to start banking their teeth for stem cells.  But, when you think about it, the teeth children put under their pillows may end up being worth much more than the tooth fairy's going rate! Plus, if you still have your wisdom teeth, it's nice to know you're walking around with your own source of stem cells."