6533b82cfe1ef96bd128feea
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Human exfoliated deciduous teeth and oral mucosa: promising applications in tissue regeneration
Giuseppe PizzolantiCarla GiordanoGiuseppina CampisiGiovanni ZitoMarta CristaldiRiccardo AlessandroLaura TomaselloRodolfo Maucerisubject
Oral cavity Deciduous teeth Oral mucosa Mesenchymal stem cells Tissue regeneration Pediatricsmedicine.anatomical_structurebusiness.industryDeciduous teethDentistryMedicineOral mucosabusinessdescription
In the last three decades, the constantly increasing need for therapies, efficiently preventing and/or treating human diseases, has raised the interest in Regenerative Medicine (RM). RM is based on employing mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), that showed to have great proliferation, self-renewal and multilineage differentiation potential, in vitro as well as in vivo. The opportunity of an accessible, painless and low-cost reservoir of MSCs constitutes the first important step of a successful regenerative therapy to include in the current clinical practice. Oral cavity has recently demonstrated to contain different MSCs niches: dental pulp from permanent and deciduous teeth, periodontal ligament, dental follicle, apical papilla and mucosa. MSCs from dental pulp of deciduous teeth, naturally lost in pediatric age, and the oral mucosa have shown to be easily harvested and to have a promising regenerative potential. Thus, the aim of the paper is to review the potentialities of human exfoliated deciduous teeth stem cells (SHEDs) and oral mucosa stem cells (OMSCs) in RM, with the purpose of their use as accessible source of MSCs for the future of pediatric patient.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2018-05-01 |