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Need a Tooth Replaced? Urine Might Solve Your Problem

Need a Tooth Replaced? Urine Might Solve Your Problem


Widget by : news7monde
Chinese researchers used cells generated from urine to build structures that resemble human teeth. Eventually, they hope that human stem cells could provide the basis for a tooth bud that could be transplanted into the jaw of the patient.
For the current experiment, published in the journal Cell Regeneration, the researchers transplanted stem cells into mice and were able to grow "teeth" that have many of the qualities of human teeth: elasticity, pulp, dentin and enamel-forming cells, according to Medical News Today.
SEE ALSO: Shark Teeth Weapons Reveal Surprises
There are some limitations: the new structures are only about a third as hard as human teeth, and the success rate is just 30%. The researchers hope that using human cells instead of mouse cells will resolve those issues, and that it will be the next step "toward the final dream of total regeneration of human teeth for clinical therapy," they wrote. Plus, if the patient's own cells are used, the risk of rejection by the body is negated.
However, not everyone thinks that pee is the best source for stem cells.
"It is probably one of the worst sources; there are very few cells in the first place and the efficiency of turning them into stem cells is very low," Chris Mason, a researcher at University College, London, told the BBC. "You just wouldn't do it in this way."
SEE ALSO: Extracted Teeth Could Stock Stem Cell Banks
Bacteria in urine make the risk of contamination higher than other sources, Mason said.

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