Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Scientists Just Figured Out a Way to Make Teeth Self-Regenerate

Scientists Just Figured Out a Way to Make Teeth Self-Regenerate

A new dental treatment promotes stem cell growth to fill cavities without the drill.

[DIGEST: Science Alert, The Guardian, BBC]

The painful drilling and scraping we associate with dental visits may soon be a thing of the past. According to a study published in Scientific Reports, researchers from the King’s College of London have identified a treatment that uses stem cells to regenerate rotten teeth from the inside out. Though only tested in mice thus far, this may one day replace fillings as we know them.


When you get a small crack or hole in your tooth, pulp in the tooth’s center can become exposed or infected, leading to a nasty toothache. In response, stem cells in the pulp create a thin layer of dentin – hard, calcified material found under tooth enamel, which keeps infections at bay. This process is ineffective on larger cavities, which may need intervention from a dentist. Here, they’ll typically drill out the cavity and then pack it with fillings made from artificial materials, like cement or silicone. However, as the London researchers point out, this process isn’t ideal.

As lead author Paul Sharpe said in an interview with The Guardian, “The tooth is not just of lump of mineral, it’s got its own physiology. [Dentists are] replacing a living tissue with inert cement.”

He pointed out that conventional fillings are prone to infection and breakage, and often weaken the tooth over time, which can lead to the tooth needing an extraction after multiple treatments. This new regenerative method which encourages natural tooth repair might solve this issue.

Sharpe and his team bypassed the filling process using the tooth’s own stem cells. They found that certain molecules stimulated stem cell development in the tooth’s pulpy center. One molecule used to boost this process was “Tideglusib,” previously used in clinical trials to treat neurological disorders like Alzheimer’s disease.

In the study, the team used biodegradable collagen sponges soaked in low doses of Tideglusib molecules to act like fillings for damaged molars in mice. After six weeks, the sponges had degraded, and the teeth had regenerated new dentin in its place.They also found that Tideglusib stopped the action of enzymes that usually halt dentin growth. In other words, the teeth underwent a complete, natural repair without the need for artificial fillings that might eventually degrade.

Because Tideglusib and collagen sponges are both commercially available and clinically approved, the treatment can be swiftly picked up and used in dental offices.

“Using a drug that has already been tested in clinical trials provides a real opportunity to get this dental treatment quickly into clinics,” says Sharpe. “We’ve deliberately tried to make something really simple, really quick and really cheap.”

However, the technique has only been tested in tiny mouse teeth thus far. For now, the team plans on moving onto rats, which have larger teeth and larger cavities, before moving onto human trials.

There’s still a long way to go before you see stem cell treatments at your local dentist, but many researchers are hopeful that the simplicity of this treatment might lead to dentists foregoing the drill for regenerative treatments in the future.

More from News

Donald Trump
Mark Mirko/Connecticut Public via Getty Images

Trump's Commencement Speech Claim That The U.S. Is 'Hot' Right Now Turns Into Hilariously Brutal Self-Own

President Donald Trump's attempt to smear the Biden administration turned into a self-own while he spoke at the commencement ceremony for the U.S. Coast Guard Academy this week.

Trump spoke as several hundred protesters gathered outside Coast Guard Academy campus in New London, Connecticut. During the nearly hour-long address to cadets and their families, he alternated between praising the graduating class of 2026 and revisiting familiar themes about what he described as the country’s recovery after a period of decline.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @tiktoktimmay8's TikTok video
@tiktoktimmay8/TikTok

Dad Brutally Reviews Perfumes During Daughter's Birthday Party At Ulta In Hilarious Viral TikTok

For those who did not know, having a birthday party at Ulta Beauty is now a possibility. Complete with skincare sessions, mini-makeovers, discounts, and goodie bags, it's kind of perfect for teens and tweens who are enthusiastic about makeup and skincare.

But while the birthday party is going on, what is a bored parent to do?

Keep ReadingShow less
Redditor imfrom_mars_'s photo of a textbook that includes a ChatGPT prompt
u/imfrom_mars_/Reddit

ChatGPT Response Appears To Make It Into School Textbook—And We're Doomed

Students are being actively discouraged from using ChatGPT and other AI-generation tools, as they are expected to learn their educational concepts and be able to put them into practice. They are also not supposed to use these tools while writing papers or during at-home tests.

Given how expensive grade school and college textbooks are, it is reasonable that educational writers and content professionals should be held to the same standards. Wouldn't it make sense for them to use the knowledge of their field, rather than what's been fed into ChatGPT, to make a textbook a worthwhile purchase for students?

Keep ReadingShow less
Kacey Musgraves attends the 2026 ACM Awards at MGM Grand Garden Arena.
Taylor Hill/Getty Images

Kacey Musgraves Sparks Backlash With Dismissive Response To Criticism That Her New Clothing Line Isn't Size-Inclusive

Kacey Musgraves' new Walmart collaboration was designed to bring her signature style to shoppers nationwide, but not everyone is feeling included. Shortly after the collection launched, critics questioned its size range—and Musgraves' response has since become a controversy of its own.

Reflecting on the partnership, Musgraves explained:

Keep ReadingShow less
Jack Osbourne
@jackosbourne/Instagram

Jack Osbourne Responds To Trolls Who Claim He Looks 'Grossly Underweight' With Fiery Clapback Video

Content Warning: body-shaming, weight-shaming

Some people really wouldn't be able to recognize Bruce Wayne and Batman, or Clark Kent and Superman, as the same person, and that fact has never been more evident than with the internet trolls who are thrown off by a haircut.

Keep ReadingShow less