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Volume 8, Number 4 July/August 2000 Advanced TechnologiesLaser Could Replace Dentists DrillIn the near future, a laser device inspired by NASA may replace the dentists drill. Flip a switch and it will also replace the dentists razor-sharp scalpel. Best of all, its virtually painless and requires no anesthesia for most patients. Lasers exist today that work on hard tissue to prepare teeth for filling, and on soft tissue for gum treatment and oral surgery. Buying two laser systems is expensive. Only five percent of approximately 140,000 U.S. dentists use a laser system. Now, researchers at NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, have demonstrated that the two laser wavelengths important to dentists can be produced from a single, easy-to-use system. The system is simple because weve already done all the complex physics in the lab, said Langley laser researcher Keith Murray, one of three inventors of the dental laser technology. The other inventors are Norman Barnes, also of Langleys Laser Systems Branch, and Ralph Hutcheson of Scientific Materials Corp., Bozeman, Montana.
Both wavelengths can be produced using the same hardware, dramatically reducing cost and complexity. Dentists can switch between the two by selecting the amount and rate of energy pumped into the specially designed laser system. The resulting hardware, estimated to run about one-half the cost of two distinct laser systems, is about one-half the size of two systems and, unlike typical present-day systems, does not require the laser system to be "tuned" by the operator. Lantis Laser, Inc., Hewitt, New Jersey, is working with NASA Langley to refine the technology to explore its potential as a commercial dental laser product. Under the terms of a Space Act Agreement, a Lantis scientist will perform research in a Langley laboratory with help from the technologys inventors. Assuming Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of the technology by mid-2001, the goal is to begin sales of the device by the end of 2001. Dr. Craig Gimbel is a dentist, a co-founder of Lantis and a principal investigator for the FDA clinical trials that led to the May 1997 approval of lasers for hard tissue dentistry. Dr. Gimbel believes both patients and dentists would find much to like about a dual-wave dental laser. Filled teeth can be stronger, according to Dr. Gimbel, because a laser removes less of the healthy tooth for filling. A dual wavelength laser could also minimize blood flow during surgery by searing the cut. And the dentist feels more comfortable when the patient feels more comfortable. When I dont have to use a dental drill, or I dont have to use a scalpel, or I dont have to use anesthesia in all procedures, I feel better and, of course, so does my patient, said Gimbel. The discovery of the two wavelength technology is a spin-off of work to develop high power lasers for remote sensing of the atmosphere, a key element in NASAs atmospheric sciences mission. The technology has also been used in aeronautics research, including measurements of winds, wind shear and turbulence in-flight, and measurement of wake vortices from the ground in airport terminal areas. Those investigations led to the discovery that it is possible to selectively produce two or more useful wavelengths from a single laser source.
For more information, contact Barry Price at Langley Research Center 757/864-7146, b.l.price@larc.nasa.gov Please mention you read about it in Innovation. NASA Official: Jonathan Root Web Designer: Shawn Flowers |
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