In vivo transplantation and tooth repair

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Abstract

Cell scaffold-based tooth engineering research was started by 2000 at Forsyth Institute corroborated with Dr. Vacanti's team at Massachusetts General Hospital. The first work was published in 2002 in Journal of Dental Research, in which we particularly focused on cells from postnatal tooth because of its clinical application. However, making a functional tooth from postnatal cells is still ways away. Alternatively, we formulated a partial replacement of the tooth by engineering the root of the tooth. Here, we describe a new technique in which the root of the third molar is used to replace missing teeth. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.

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Tsuchiya, S., & Honda, M. J. (2012). In vivo transplantation and tooth repair. Methods in Molecular Biology, 887, 123–134. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-61779-860-3_12

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