Scottish Daily Mail

End of the filling? Experts f ind way to grow tooth enamel

- By Colin Fernandez Environmen­t Correspond­ent

FILLINGS could become a thing of the past – as British scientists have found a way to restore tooth enamel.

Enamel coats the outer part of our teeth and is the hardest tissue in the body.

But when it wears out it cannot regrow – until now.

Researcher­s at Queen Mary University of London have developed a material which once applied to teeth, allows enamel to regrow.

The revolution­ary material – which looks like a transparen­t, soft contact lens – is placed on the outside of the tooth that needs to be repaired.

Once in place, the ‘enamel’ regrows naturally – using minerals present in our saliva to create a smooth coating around the tooth.

The breakthrou­gh, as well as being useful to repair cavities in teeth, could prevent sensitive teeth caused by worn enamel.

The material works because it has a grid-like structure.

Minerals in our calcium and phosphates, found in saliva, lodge in the gaps of the grid. These crysWhen tals form a tough new coating that has a similar strength to enamel.

Lead author Professor Alvaro Mata said: ‘We have developed a very thin tissue which mineralise­s and integrates with the rest of the tooth. We have tried this with extracted teeth.

‘We have placed a layer of this material on the tooth.

‘We make a material, a protein matrix, that is very thin and looks like a contact lens. It is transparen­t and feels like a similar material. you expose it to calcium and phosphate in saliva it triggers a very strong mineralisa­tion. Crystals regrow on the tooth in a very organised manner. It is quite amazing.’

He said that eventually the hope is to get rid of fillings.

The team have proven the system can repair teeth in the laboratory – using extracted teeth in a solution similar to our saliva. They hope to carry out clinical trials on people within two or three years.

The study was published in Nature Communicat­ions. Around 62,500 people a year are admitted to hospital in England because of tooth decay – three-quarters of them, or 46,400, children.

Scots aged in their forties and fifties have an average of ten fillings and 30 per cent of Scots P1 pupils have some tooth decay.

Reminerali­sing teeth is one of many new methods of tooth repair proposed by scientists.

Other potential approaches include injecting stem cells into the gums to regrow teeth, using lasers to stimulate teeth to regrow, and new drug treatments that have been shown to promote tooth regrowth in rats.

Enamel does not regrow in the body because the cells that help produce it die off after it is made.

There are three main causes of tooth decay.

One is poor toothbrush­ing – allowing plaque to build up and attack the enamel.

Another is plaque formation – caused when bacteria, acid, food particles and saliva combine in the mouth, and dry mouth.

Dry mouth can cause tooth decay because saliva washes away plaque from teeth.

The British Dental Associatio­n reports tooth decay is now the number one reason for hospital admissions among children.

There has been a 10 per cent rise in children having teeth removed in hospital in the past four years, the associatio­n said.

Damien Walmsley, the British Dental Associatio­n’s scientific adviser, welcomed the study.

He said: ‘It shows that potential improvemen­ts in dentistry go hand-in-hand with developmen­ts in materials science.’

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