Monday, March 25, 2013

Oak Ridge National Laboratory crack the genetic code of mouth bacteria

Microbes from the human mouth are telling Oak Ridge National Laboratory scientists something about periodontitis and more after they cracked the genetic code of bacteria linked to the condition.


The finding, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, profiles the SR1 bacteria, a group of microbes present in many environments, ranging from the mouth to deep within the Earth, that have never been cultivated in the laboratory. Human oral SR1 bacteria are elevated in periodontitis, a disease marked by inflammation and infection of the ligaments and bones that support the teeth.

Scientists also found that the SR1 bacteria employ a unique genetic code in which the codon UGA - a sequence of nucleotides guiding protein synthesis -- appears not to serve its normal role as a stop code. In fact, scientists found that UGA serves to introduce a glycine amino acid instead.

"This is like discovering that in a language you know well there is a dialect in which the word stop means go," said co-author Mircea Podar of the Department of Energy lab's Biosciences Division. Podar and Dieter Söll of Yale University led the team that also included scientists from DOE's Joint Genome Institute who contributed to the analysis of the single-cell sequencing data.

The researchers believe the altered genetic code limits the exchange of genes between SR1 and other bacteria because they use a different genetic alphabet.

"In the big pool of bacteria, genes can be exchanged between species and can contribute to increased antibiotic resistance or better adaptation to living in humans," Podar said. "Because SR1 has a change in its genetic alphabet, its genes will not function in other microbes."

Podar and colleagues envision this work providing a path toward a better understanding of microbiological factors of periodontitis as well as to the establishment of a framework to help scientists interpret genomic data from this bacterium and others that have the same altered genetic code.

"So far, no one has been able to isolate and cultivate this type of bacterium," said Podar, who noted that there are bugs in our mouth that we have no clue about and, until now, this was one of them. "The genetic information obtained by sequencing one single cell may offer researchers a key to 'domesticating' these organisms and studying them in the laboratory."

Regular dental checkups will help prevent periodontis.  Schedule your appointment at Sonoma Smiles today by calling (707) 200-1191

Or book online at www.sonomasmiles.com

Monday, March 18, 2013

Rohnert Park Dentist’s Homemade Toothpaste Recipe


Your favorite Rohnert Park Dentist has found a safe alternative to the common toothpastes! Did you know that there are simple recipes you can make at home?

Once you realize how easy it is to make DIY toothpaste you will never again spend a fortune on the store-bought brands.
The Keeper Of The Home shared some amazing tips that inspired us. Baking  soda alone will definitely go to work for your pearly whites. To amplify the results, team it up with sea salt. This is a gentle yet abrasive clean. Another option is to use a mineral powder such as calcium and/or magnesium. Don't hesitate to add hydrogen peroxide to the powder right before use or rinse with hydrogen peroxide for added benefit.
Adding coconut oil to the recipe will form a paste, and antibacterial properties. Essential oils will add flavor. Your recipe can be as simple as coconut oil, baking soda, a dash of salt, and essential oil.
Recently I have been completely inspired by the benefits of  xylitol and have now come to realize that it is the best way to help combat the saltiness. Xylitol, according to research, does appear to be safe and effective for cavity prevention. I also recently added trace mineral drops to my paste. I use these to add minerals back into our reverse osmosis filtered water when making water kefir and I thought it would be a great addition to our toothpaste as well.
Homemade Toothpaste
2 Tbsp. coconut oil
2 Tbps. baking soda
2 Tbsp. calcium magnesium powder
2 Tbps. xylitol or green stevia powder
2 tsp. real sea salt
20 drops essential oil (I use peppermint.)
10 drops trace minerals

Simply read, the recipe is just: equal parts coconut oil, baking soda, calcium/magnesium powder, xylitol with a dash of salt, a few drops trace minerals, and essential oils to taste.
Another easy to make, yet effective recipe was found by DIY Natural and also includes a complete savings breakdown for our cost conscious clientele.
INGREDIENTS
  • 2/3 cup baking soda
  • 4 tsp fine sea salt (optional – gives paste extra scrubbing power, but is okay to leave out if the taste is too salty)
  • 1 – 2 tsp peppermint extract or 10-15 drops peppermint essential oil (or add your favorite flavor – spearmint, orange, etc.)
  • water (add to desired consistency)
COST BREAKDOWN & SAVINGS
Here is the breakdown in cost analysis for 5.33oz of this homemade toothpaste:
  • baking soda @ 16oz = $1.00 | 2/3 cup is 5.33oz which = $0.33
  • fine sea salt @ 22oz = $2.00 | 4tsp is .66oz which = $0.06
  • peppermint extract @ 1oz = $3.00 | 2tsp is .33oz which = $1.04 | Better yet, use 1tsp is .17oz which = $0.52
(**note** you can use as much or as little peppermint or other flavor as you wish, add the flavoring little by little until you reach an amount you enjoy.)
Tom’s of Maine Spearmint Gel® costs an average of $5.00 for a 5.2oz tube.  Based on the calculations above the same amount of the homemade toothpaste will cost  between $0.91 and $1.43 for 5.33oz, depending on how much flavoring is used.
The cost savings will be between $4.09 – $3.57 per tube!

Since you are on a roll saving money, come visit our Rohnert Park Dentist Office for a free teeth whitening with any dental exam! Call today to schedule your visit!

(707) 200-1191


Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Emergency Dental and Tooth Injury from your Rohnert Park Dentist

Tooth injuries are common, particularly in late childhood. When a permanent tooth is injured, or damaged by decay, it is always best to try to save it rather than remove it. This is especially true in the case of older children and young adults, who need a full set of teeth to help guide the continuing growth and development of their jaws and bite. Because their jawbone structure is still developing, they are also not physically ready to receive a permanent artificial replacement tooth should a natural tooth be lost. Yet this age group is also the most prone to dental injuries, and saving an immature permanent tooth can present a complex — but definitely not hopeless — situation. What can be done?

Tooth Pulp Fact — Not Fiction, from your Rohnert Park Dentist

Tooth Injury facts from your Rohnert Park Dentist
A cross section of a fully formed, healthy front tooth, showing the pulp (nerve tissue) in relation to the surrounding tooth structures.
First, it's important to understand why this age group presents particular challenges not seen in adults. When an adult injures a fully formed tooth, it can often be saved with a routine root canal filling procedure, in which the damaged, infected or dead tissue of the pulp, which is located deep inside the tooth, is removed and the canals which housed it are sealed. Healthy pulp tissues are vital, containing connective tissue, blood vessels and nerves that enable the tooth to grow and perceive sensation. But the pulp can also become infected and actually die when a tooth is damaged by trauma or decay.
This can be very problematic not only for completion of proper root development, but everything else that it affects: proper bite development, jawbone and facial growth, as well as the more usual elements associated with teeth — chewing, speech and aesthetics. And it's difficult, if not impossible, to replace teeth when the system in which they're developing is itself growing and changing so rapidly. So there are many reasons to save damaged or traumatized immature permanent teeth, at least until the individual has reached maturity when, if necessary, the tooth can be replaced within the framework of a healthy and functional bite.
Tooth pulp and root canals
A successful root canal procedure is necessary to save a tooth once the nerve tissue dies as a result of tooth decay or trauma. Access to the root canal space is gained by making a small opening from the tongue side of a front tooth.
In the case of an adult with fully formed teeth, pulp death is not as bad as it sounds. A full-grown tooth does not need its pulp, which can be removed if diseased, and the cavity (or “canal”) disinfected and sealed. Baby teeth, which will eventually be lost, can also be saved until their natural loss, but present their own special treatment circumstances. (See “Root Canal Treatment for Children's Teeth”)
The development of a tooth starts with an enamel cap known as the crown (the part you see in your mouth). Enamel is the hardest and most durable substance produced in nature. Inside the enamel cap, the body of the tooth forms out of a bone-like substance called dentin. A permanent tooth that's still developing needs to maintain its own vital tissue because it is the living pulp within that will generate the dentin of the roots of the tooth. Just as coral produces the hard calcium structure around it to protect its soft inner living parts, so too does the pulp tissue produce the dentin body and roots of a tooth — and this is impossible to accomplish without tooth pulp. In fact, the developing roots help guide the crowns of teeth into position during the eruption process.
After the roots are fully formed, the pulp continues to deposit dentin throughout life, so that the chamber in which it lives gets smaller and smaller. If the pulp dies prematurely, root formation in the young tooth cannot be completed; thus the tooth cannot respond to any sensation. In due course a “non-vital” or “dead” tooth becomes brittle and darker due to dehydration and blood stagnation, and thus more prone to fracture, particularly if root formation is incomplete. So it's important to try to rescue the pulp, which in turn will save the tooth.
There are specialized techniques for doing just that — painlessly, effectively and relatively inexpensively. In this article, the second part of a series on root canal procedures, we will explain treatment of injury to immature permanent teeth.
Pathways To The Pulp
Today, even when the pulp is damaged, its vitality can be maintained with a variety of endodontic (“endo” – inside; “dont” – tooth) techniques. What's more, stem cell research is leading to the ability to completely replace dead pulp with new tissue in immature permanent teeth. Thus all pathways are leading to the salvation of a healthy tooth with a vital pulp.
The first step in all treatment is a correct diagnosis — figuring out exactly what is wrong. Therefore it is important to take an accurate history of what caused the damage, the extent of injury, as well as the state of general health and any medications the person with the injured tooth is taking.
All are important treatment factors that an endodontist will consider along with a detailed clinical examination. An endodontist is a specialist in saving teeth through the diagnosis and treatment of facial pain and root canal diseases and disorders. A correct diagnosis must be confirmed by taking appropriate radiographs (x-ray pictures).
What follows is a description of conditions an endodontist might find, and the best courses of action to save an injured or damaged immature tooth.

Injury Without Pulp Exposure

The best option is to avoid exposure of the living pulp tissue within a tooth, whether it is as a result of trauma or tooth decay. Indirect Pulp Therapy offers a way to treat tooth decay (in which the dentin is infected with bacteria) without exposing the pulp. It involves the removal of as much soft decayed dentin as possible, while leaving a layer of harder dentin — even if stained by the decay — to avoid pulp exposure. An antibacterial agent is applied and the tooth filled to seal it, thereby preventing further infection. When properly applied, this procedure has proven 90% successful over three-year periods.

Injury With Pulp Exposure

There are several different techniques that can be used if the decay or injury has exposed the tooth pulp.
Pulpotomy (“otomy” – partial removal) of the affected or infected upper portion of the pulp tissue is used to preserve the vitality of the remaining tissue in the roots, so that it continues to live and function. Injured exposed pulp will become inflamed, and its tissue will overgrow. Removal of the overgrown tissue and placement of a dentin-stimulating material such as calcium hydroxide or mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA) allows the remaining pulp tissue to encourage the growth of new tooth material that will patch the exposure. A large majority of young permanent teeth treated with this technique heal well and root formation continues to healthy completion. Teeth so treated last for many years, avoiding the necessity for traditional root canal treatment.
A pulpotomy that goes deeper into the root or roots is a technique used to encourage apexogenesis (“apex” – root end; “genesis” – to come into being). When this technique is properly employed, it can enable the remaining pulp to complete forming the end of an immature root. As the young root (which has a cylinder shape) continues to grow, it elongates and ultimately narrows, closing off to form a normal root ending or apex.
When the pulp tissue in an immature permanent tooth is no longer salvageable and/or there is already infection around an incompletely formed root, an apexification is performed. This procedure is designed to seal the open, cylindrical root end of an immature tooth and allow the development of healthy bone-like tissue around it to support the tooth. This wide-open end of the immature root is often referred to as a “blunderbuss” after the type of wide-muzzled gun used by the Pilgrims. The root canal is thoroughly cleaned and disinfected and the immature apex or root end is sealed with MTA in an attempt to enable the surrounding bone tissue to heal and return to normal. The root canal is filled with a rubber-like material called gutta percha. Although highly successful, apexification should be the treatment of last resort in a tooth that has incompletely formed roots.

Life After Pulp Death

Until recently, there were few options for permanent immature teeth in which the pulp tissue had died. But recent research has opened a new pathway. Immature teeth with clear evidence of dead pulp tissues, abscess formation or even infection spreading out of the root canal have been encouraged to grow new pulps to complete root formation. Success is dependent on the activity of a newly identified population of stem cells, which are the building blocks for many different types of cells and tissues in the body. The stem cells in pulp are hidden treasure with enormous potential for tissue regeneration and “bio-root” engineering.
Based on what is known today, all immature teeth with open root ends in children or teenagers may be considered candidates for regenerative treatment. The procedure involves very thoroughly disinfecting the cleaned-out root canal system and then encouraging a bit of bleeding from surrounding healthy tissues into the canal. The blood clot that forms in the canal serves as a building block for pulp regeneration, allowing for root formation to continue. Stem cell regeneration will allow blunderbuss procedures to fade into history.

The Continuing Story

The state of the art and science of endodontic treatment continues to improve the outcomes for injured and infected pulps of immature permanent teeth. Today's successfully treated teeth can go on to form complete roots and last a lifetime — or at least until growth of the face and jaws is complete and state-of-the-art dental implants can be used to replace them. But then again, and not too far off, scientists working with stem cells may even be able to grow you a whole new tooth!

In the meantime, if you've experienced tooth injury or possibly need a dental implant, call us at (707) 200-1191 for a free consultation.

Or visit our website at www.sonomasmiles.com

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Rohnert Park Cosmetic Dentist Discusses Porcelain Veneers

The advances dentistry has seen in recent years are truly remarkable — especially when it comes to porcelain veneers. Not only have the materials used to make veneers improved tremendously, so too has the skill level of the dental professionals who work with them.
Putting Your Best Face Forward
Smiling makes you feel good. It also communicates positive emotions to others. But some people have lost the ability to smile freely, along with the joy it brings to both themselves and others. They will cover their mouths with their hands to avoid showing their teeth in public. In many cases, the problems they are trying to hide — staining or discoloration, worn-down or slightly misaligned teeth, or even too much space between their teeth — could be addressed beautifully with porcelain veneers.

So what, exactly, is a porcelain veneer?

Porcelain Veneers from your Rohnert Park DentistYou've probably already heard the word “veneer” used in other contexts to describe a very thin covering that makes the surface of something look better. That's exactly what it means in dentistry as well. An extremely thin custom-made shell that is astonishingly lifelike in appearance is placed on the front of a tooth giving it a new “face.” In order to make veneers look naturally contoured and harmonious, it may or may not be necessary to remove tooth structure, depending on how big the teeth are to begin with, as well as the desired final tooth size and shape.

Veneers can improve any of the following characteristics:

Color
Tooth color can change throughout one's life, generally yellowing with age and time. Some people who were given the antibiotic tetracycline in childhood develop tooth discoloration that is very difficult to remove. Also, the choices we make in consuming certain foods, drinks (especially red wine, coffee and tea), and/or cigarettes can affect the color of our teeth. Whitening can help, but the degree the teeth will whiten is dependent on the starting point. Some teeth with excessive discoloration never achieve an acceptable color with simple tooth whitening. A porcelain veneer, however, has the ability to mask color and therefore provides greater latitude when making a color shift to whiter and brighter.
Shape
Abnormal wear on teeth can make them appear shorter, flatter or rough along the edges. Younger teeth have rounder shaped edges. Therefore, veneers can give you a more youthful smile not only making the teeth whiter, and brighter, but also by redesigning them to incorporate the features that make them look more youthful. On the other hand, some people consider rounder teeth more feminine and might want the edges made a little squarer for a more masculine appearance. But that's the great thing about veneers: it's a collaborative effort in which you play an important part.
Size
Sometimes the only thing keeping a person's smile from being all it can be is simply that the teeth are too small. Maybe they've always been that way or maybe they became shorter with wear, over time. Veneers can be used to make the teeth appear larger for a dramatic enhancement. Of course, if the teeth have been worn down excessively, it is important to address the underlying causes in order to prevent recurrence. Likewise, if you have lost a lot of tooth structure from decay or trauma, you might benefit more from porcelain crowns that cover the entire tooth and reduce the risk for future problems.
Alignment & Spacing
If you want to close a small gap between your two front teeth, for example, or if some of your teeth are misaligned, there are a couple of ways you could straighten them. You could opt for orthodontic treatment, if they are very crooked, which would move them into correct alignment. Veneers can make slight corrections in alignment while improving color and shape at the same time. Of course, if the gap is large or the misalignment significant, orthodontics might still be the way to go, or a combination of both might be needed for best possible results.

If you think you may be a candidate for porcelain veneers, contact your Rohnert Park Dentist today at (707) 200-1191

Or find more information on Dr. Sutton at http://www.sonomasmiles.com

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