| Literature DB >> 25332909 |
Yao Li1, Li-Hong Shu1, Ming Yan1, Wen-Yong Dai1, Jun-Jun Li1, Guang-Dong Zhang1, Jin-Hua Yu1.
Abstract
Generally, the dental pulp needs to be removed when it is infected, and root canal therapy (RCT) is usually required in which infected dental pulp is replaced with inorganic materials (paste and gutta percha). This treatment approach ultimately brings about a dead tooth. However, pulp vitality is extremely important to the tooth itself, since it provides nutrition and acts as a biosensor to detect the potential pathogenic stimuli. Despite the reported clinical success rate, RCT-treated teeth are destined to be devitalized, brittle and susceptible to postoperative fracture. Recently, the advances and achievements in the field of stem cell biology and regenerative medicine have inspired novel biological approaches to apexogenesis in young patients suffering from pulpitis or periapical periodontitis. This review mainly focuses on the benchtop and clinical regeneration of root apex mediated by adult stem cells. Moreover, current strategies for infected pulp therapy are also discussed here.Entities:
Keywords: Apexogenesis; Dental pulp; Odontoblast; Stem cell; Tooth regeneration
Year: 2014 PMID: 25332909 PMCID: PMC4202485 DOI: 10.5662/wjm.v4.i2.99
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Methodol ISSN: 2222-0682