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Associates In Oral & Facial Surgery Associates In Oral & Facial Surgery  727-478-2749  Benjamin E. First, DMD, PA

Palm Harbor Office
Stonebridge Professional Park
4156 Woodlands Parkway, Suite B
voice 727.478.2749
New Port Richey Office
6906 Madison Street, Suite 2
voice 727.645.4836
Dental Implants Tampa Bay

Palm Harbor Wisdom Teeth
         

 

Dental Implants Palm Harbor Stem Save

Click the StemSave logo above
for more information.

 

To learn more about how you can secure your family’s future health by banking their stem cells, call our office today or visit www.StemSave.com.

Specialists in Dental Implants, Wisdom Teeth, Oral and Facial Surgery in New Port Richey, Florida

Imagine a world where victims of spinal cord injuries can walk, where there are no shortages of organs for those in need of an organ transplant, where diabetes is no longer treated with insulin shots but cured by implanting insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells grown from the individual’s own stem cells. Such is the promise of stem cell based regenerative medicine as envisioned by both the NIH (National Institutes of Health) and the HHS (Department of Health and Human Services). Both the NIH and HHS are committing significant resources to the field of regenerative medicine and both predict it will revolutionize medicine as we know it today, improving quality of life and reducing health care costs.

According to the HHS, “This revolutionary technology has the potential to develop therapies for previously untreatable diseases and conditions. Examples of diseases regenerative medicine can cure include: diabetes, heart disease, renal failure, osteoporosis and spinal cord injuries. Virtually any disease that results from malfunctioning, damaged, or failing tissues may be potentially cured through regenerative medicine therapies. Having these tissues available to treat sick patients creates the concept of tissues for life.” So promising is the technology that the US military is spending hundreds of millions of dollars through the AFIRM (Armed Forces Institute of Regenerative Medicine) initiative, to develop regenerative stem cell therapies to treat injured soldiers returning from battle.

So what is Regenerative Medicine? According to the NIH, “Regenerative Medicine is the process of creating living, functional tissues to repair or replace organ function lost due to age, disease, damage or congenital defects. This field holds the promise of regenerating damaged tissues and organs in the body by stimulating previously irreparable organs to heal themselves. Regenerative medicine also empowers scientists to grow tissues and organs in the laboratory and safely implant them when the body cannot heal itself.” Simply put, regenerative medicine utilizes stem cells, the body’s own natural repair and maintenance mechanisms, to address disease and trauma.

Stem cells are unique in that they are the only cells in our body that can regenerate. Certain types of stem cells have the ability to ‘differentiate.’ This allows stem cells to turn into a broad range of specialized tissue types. This means that stem cells can regenerate organs, tissues, bones and much more. As a result, we are witnessing stem cell therapies being developed to treat disease and trauma such as Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, MS, arthritis, heart disease, spinal cord injuries, joint replacement, genetic diseases and many more.

Did you know that there are powerful stem cells in your teeth? The stem cells that exist in teeth are very compelling for a number of reasons:

  • They are ‘plastic’ – meaning they can differentiate into other types of tissue such as muscle, neurons, bone, organs, insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells, skin and cartilage to name a few.
  • Virtually no chance of rejection - saving your own stem cells from your teeth, otherwise known as your own autologous tissue, means that once they are reintroduced into the body during a treatment, they will not be rejected as foreign tissue as the body recognizes them as their own. Reintroducing your own tissue during treatment virtually eliminates the chance of rejection and the need for immunosuppressant drugs.
  • Non-controversial - stem cells in teeth are ‘adult’ stem cells; they are non-embryonic stem cells and therefore do not have any of the moral and ethical controversies associated with embryonic stem cells.
  • Easy and convenient - stem cells from teeth can be recovered and banked conveniently and affordably during routine dental procedures.
 

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