The Free Press Journal

Artificial blood vessels may prevent tooth loss

- AGENCIES

Researcher­s have developed a 3-D printing inspired process to engineer artificial blood vessels in teeth, an advnce that may effectivel­y regenerate the function of teeth in patients undergoing root canal treatment.

While root canals are effective in saving a tooth that has become infected or decayed, this age-old procedure may cause teeth to become brittle and susceptibl­e to fracture over time. The current procedure involves removing infected dental tissues and replacing them with synthetic biomateria­ls covered by a protective crown.

"This process eliminates the tooth's blood and nerve supply, rendering it lifeless and void of any biological response or defence mechanism," said Luiz Bertassoni, an assistant professor at Oregon Health and Science University in the US.

"Without this functional­ity, adult teeth may be lost much sooner, which increases the nedd dental implants," said Bertassoni, principal investigat­or of the study published in the journal Scientific Reports.

So Bertassoni and colleagues used a 3D printingin­spired process to create blood vessels in the lab.

They placed a fibre mold made of sugar molecules across the root canal of extracted human teeth and injected a gel-like material, similar to proteins found in the body, filled with dental pulp cells. The researcher­s removed the fibre to make a long microchann­el in the root canal and inserted endothelia­l cells isolated from the interior lining of blood vessels.

After seven days, dentinprod­ucing cells proliferat­ed near the tooth walls and artificial blood vessels formed inside the tooth. "This result proves that fabricatio­n of artificial blood vessels can be a highly effective strategy for fully regenerati­ng the function of teeth," said Bertassoni. "We believe that this finding may change the way that root canal treatments are done in the future," he said.

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