It’s like pulling teeth, they say,
when something is particularly
difficult.
While having teeth pulled is still
a pain, replacing the teeth pulled
could become less painful.
Researchers here have invented
a 3D-printed scaffold to grow
bone for placing dental implants
after a tooth has been extracted.
This could eliminate the need
for painful bone grafting, in which
bone is taken from other parts of
the patient’s body.
The scaffold was developed by
dental surgeons from National
Dental Centre Singapore (NDCS)
and bioengineers from Nanyang
Technological University over the
past five years.
They say it is “the first of its kind
in the world in terms of design
and material” and plan to roll it
out around three years later, after
a second trial involving 132 patients
is completed.
It was first successfully tested
on seven patients.
The invention will be particularly
helpful, given that the number
of tooth decay and gum disease
cases in Singapore is likely to increase
because of an ageing population,
said Dr Goh Bee Tin, deputy
director of research and education
at NDCS.
The scaffold is made of a porous,
synthetic material and traps
bone-forming cells in the empty
tooth socket. It is more effective
in growing bone than the bone
substitutes from animals and humans now used.
“Bone substitutes take a long
time to be absorbed by the body,”
said Dr Goh. “In comparison, the
scaffold is absorbed fully and
much faster by the body, and is
cheaper to make.”
The scaffold has been patented
and NDCS is working with artificial
bone scaffold company Osteopore
International to fabricate it.
Besides developing the scaffolds,
NDCS started using 3D imaging and printing
technology for corrective jaw
surgery two years ago.
Surgeons are now able to simulate
the surgery on 3D virtual and
physical skull models, as well as
print plastic templates of what the
patient’s jaw would look like after
surgery. These are placed on the
patient’s jaw during the operation
to guide surgeons.
They can reduce the time needed
in planning and executing the
surgery, as well as complications.
“The models make the surgery
more precise... surgeons have a
clearer idea of what they should
do and what vital anatomy to
avoid,” said Dr Chew Ming Tak,
Senior Consultant at the Department of Orthodontics at NDCS.
Last year, more than half of the
140 or so jaw surgery cases at
NDCS used 3D imaging technology
in the planning of treatments.
When student Priscilla Chan,
22, was to undergo surgery two
years ago to have her long jaw
corrected, her dentist used 3D
technology to print out a mould of
what her jaw would look like after
the operation.
“It was quite exciting to see
what I would look like after surgery and
I felt safer,” she said.
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