There are cases that bones were
loss at the root of a tooth that prompted dentists to remove the infected
tooth.
The current treatment was to pump
in artificial bones at the removal of an infected tooth. Then a dentist would
drill, fill with artificial bones, install a screw, and then an artificial tooth.
The issue was the metal screw and
loss of natural tooth. The artificial bone didn’t fuse with our natural bones,
i.e. it would crack one day. Having a metal screw in your body didn’t sound
good.
Why didn’t they do the following?
-
Analyze our
bone’s components or ingredients, i.e. how to make a natural-like artificial bone
with similar components.
-
The
artificial would be in the form of liquid to pump/fill/inject in “the missing or bone loss”
around the tooth.
-
The bone
liquid would fuse to the surrounding natural bones.
-
The bone liquid
would be hardened later by ultra-violet rays or similar rays.
This would save pain to remove and to drill in
our jaw. We would be able to save our tooth, too.