Testing teeth: Researchers at the University of Toronto have just assembled a clinical prototype of a new laser device (shown above) that measures thermal and light frequencies to detect early signs of decay below a tooth's surface, where demineralization is difficult to spot with x-ray technology. The optical pen beams heat-emitting infrared light onto a tooth's surface, and sensors within the pen measure heat and light waves that bounce back. Certain wave patterns can reveal loss of mineral content in a tooth, a sign of early decay that can lead to troublesome cavities.
Quantum Technologies

Biomedicine

Quantum Detection of Tooth Decay

A new laser device designed to detect the earliest stages of tooth decay could help dentists stop cavities in their tracks.

  • Friday, March 23, 2007
  • By Tyler Hamilton

A newly developed laser device that uses thermal radiation and light waves to detect tiny, subsurface lesions in teeth could potentially unseat x-rays as the diagnostic standard in dental care.

Researchers at the University of Toronto's Centre for Advanced Diffusion Wave Studies say that the technology can spot lesions as small as 50 microns in between teeth, one of the most difficult spaces to spot cavities, and up to 5 millimeters below the surface of a tooth. This is well outside the boundaries of x-ray detection without exposing the patient to radiation. The researchers built a clinical prototype of the device this month and plan to begin clinical tests next year.

Dentistry, which has long lived by the "drill, fill, and bill" approach to dental care, is gradually shifting to a model focused on early detection and oral-disease prevention. Most new detection technologies on the market or in the lab attempt to image the teeth using light, including such methods as optical coherence tomography and light-induced fluorescence. Such products, while more effective than x-rays, have their own limitations.

"Light by itself cannot do it because it scatters too much," says Andreas Mandelis, a professor of mechanical, industrial, and electrical engineering at the University of Toronto who codeveloped the new laser device.

Advertisement

Mandelis, an expert in the use of thermophotonics to detect defects in metals, semiconductors, and other crystal structures, realized seven years ago while visiting the dentist that subsurface defects in tooth enamel, such as demineralization, could be detected using the same approach. Loss of mineral content is a precursor to cavity development.

Mandelis's dentist, Stephen Abrams, lamented that the dental profession treated decay, or "caries," at the wrong end of the spectrum--when large, noticeable cavities had already formed. The two joined forces and began conducting research into diagnostic alternatives.

"The analogy we use is gangrene," says Abrams, now chief executive of Quantum Dental Technologies, a startup founded by him and Mandelis to commercialize the laser device. "When do you want to treat gangrene: when you have to lob off a limb, or when you catch it early? Dentistry figures it's been doing a great job, but what we've been doing is chopping off limbs all these years."

Their device works by focusing pulses of laser light on the tooth, causing it to glow and release heat. The wavelengths of light and heat emitted from the tooth are captured by an infrared detector, offering detailed information about the tooth's condition, including the presence of hidden lesions and signs of early demineralization of enamel.

Print

Related Articles

Peering into the Heart, Safely

An emerging technology could offer clearer pictures of the heart.

Detecting Decay

A new device could help dentists better detect the early signs of tooth decay.

Close Comments

To comment, please sign in or register

Forgot my password

ssamd

19 Comments

  • 1788 Days Ago
  • 03/24/2007

Quantum leap

Let's see if the state makes this available to all the citizens like they do fluoride.  No, lasers are not a waste product.
Sam

Reply

RickMerrill

2 Comments

  • 1788 Days Ago
  • 03/24/2007

Re: Quantum leap

Floride is a passive delivery - no action by the recipient is required.  For preventive care, the patient must present themselves at the doctor's office.

Dentistry is not even on the National health agenda and it should be!

Reply

Advertisement

MAGAZINE

Can We Build Tomorrow's Breakthroughs?

Manufacturing in the United States is in trouble. That's bad news not just for the country's economy but for the future of innovation.

Videos

The Virtual Nurse Will See You Now

More

Advertisement

Technology Review Lists

TR50

Our list of the 50 most innovative companies, including the following:

Calxeda

Lyric Semiconductor

Synthetic Genomics

Cotendo

More

Advertisement

Facebook

Advertisement