Scientists develop new therapy for stuffing empty tooth

It seems that the alternative to the painful stuffing tooth will be available soon. Scientists have developed a new method of treatment to full the small cavities between the teeth, without the use of the painful drilling.
The dentists drugged the patient's mouth, then drilling inside the tooth structure to gain access to the cavity, where the doctor enters a perforated paper between the cavities of teeth. The therapy is being tested in the University of Alabama at Birmingham, which usually completed without the need for anesthesia.

Dr. Augusto Robles, from the University of Dentistry said: "When we develop cavities between teeth, sometimes we have to go through the teeth, and often we cause damage to the tooth structure with good health".

"This new system allows us to bypass drilling and helps us to maintain this structure, I never thought that this could be possible in dentistry, in my experience of 24 years of dental practice, this change everything we've done, it is great," Dr. Robles added.

"It is expected that this treatment will get the consent of the patient as long as it is painless," he stated.

The Commission has approved the therapy already, which is available in Germany.
This comes after months of inventing dental fillings that will help to reform itself from the continuous decay. The treatment has developed by experts at Queen Mary University in Britain, which is expected to get rid of mercury fillings, known as the biologically active glass.