Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Sight restored by her TOOTH?!


That’s right! This is amazing and true. Talk about yet another reason you want to keep you teeth healthy. Check out this article and let me know what you think. Everyday I am amazed at the advances that science is making. What could possibly be next?

Blind Woman Sees With 'Tooth-in-Eye' Surgery
Doctors in Florida Restore Sharron Kay Thornton's Vision by Implanting a Tooth in Her Eye

Article from ABCnews.go.com

Forget about an eye for an eye -- doctors in Florida have taken a blind woman's tooth, and used it to help restore her vision.
A team of specialists at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine announced Wednesday that they are the first surgeons in the United States to restore a person's sight by using a tooth. The procedure is formally called modified osteo-odonto-keratoprosthesis (or MOOKP).
Sharron "Kay" Thornton, 60, went blind nine years ago from a rare disorder called Stevens-Johnson syndrome. The disorder left the surface of her eyes so severely scarred she was legally blind. But doctors determined the inside of her eyes were still functional enough that she might one day see with the help of MOOKP.
"This is a patient where the surface of the eye is totally damaged -- no wetness, no tears," said Dr. Victor L. Perez, the ophthalmologist at the Bascom Palmer Eye Institute at the University of Miami who operated on Thornton. "So we kind of recreate the environment of the mouth in the eye."
The three-phase operation started with University of Miami dentist, Dr. Yoh Sawatari, who removed a tooth from Thornton's mouth and prepared an implant of her own dental tissue for her most severely damaged eye. The tissue would be used to make a new cornea to replace the damaged one.
Doctors then removed a section of Thornton's cheek that would become the soft, mucus tissue around her pupil. Finally, Perez and his team implanted the modified tooth -- which had a hole drilled through the center -- to support a prosthetic lens.
"We use that tooth as a platform to put the optical cylinder into the eye," explained Perez. Perez said doctors often use less risky and less invasive techniques to replace corneas, but the damage from Thornton's Stevens-Johnson syndrome ruled those out.
Using a tooth might sound strange, but it also offers an advantage. Because doctors used Thornton's own cheek and tooth tissue she faces less risk that her immune system will attack the tooth and reject the transplant. Patients getting a cornea transplant from a deceased donor, on the other hand, face chances that their immune system will reject the new tissue.
This Labor Day, Thornton was able to take off the bandages and she immediately saw the light.
"From the first day, she's been able to see 20/70," said Perez. "She cannot drive legally (yet), but she can see her hands, see TV, see the sky, see the clouds."
At the moment, Thornton has nothing covering the cheek tissue on her eye, an aesthetic drawback MOOKP patients must face.
"Her eye looks different but, the goal is once she heals more we can put on a cosmetic eye shield," said Perez.
The technique was developed in Italy in the early 1960s, but the original procedure has been modified over the years by doctors in Europe. Hundreds of people in Japan, England and Italy have regained vision through the technique, but most eye specialists in the U.S. don't foresee MOOKP catching on in America.
"It's a complicated and rare procedure that a few people use in desperate situations [and] some patients benefit when the alternative is blindness," said Dr. Stanley Chang, an ophthalmologist at the Columbia University Medical Center in New York City.
While OOKP is used more often in Europe, doctors U.S. typically choose a less tedious technique called the Boston Keratoprosthesis, which is similar to MOOKP but uses a prosthetic cornea instead of one grown from dental tissue and does not require cheek tissue to surround the implant.
The Boston technique, experts say, can save patients time and give them a more natural looking eye.
Doctors may use MOOKP for some uncommon situations -- including people with Stevens-Johnson syndrome, or who were chemical burn victims -- but not always.
"These conditions, although rare or uncommon, are still important because the patients may have little or no vision, and because there have not been very effective treatments to restore their vision," said Dr. James Chodosh, a cornea specialist at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary.
However, Chodosh added, "The [MOOKP] procedure is unlikely to be very commonly used because of the difficulty, length, and invasiveness of the surgery and the cosmetic appearance after surgery."
Dr. Uyen Tran, associate professor of ophthalmology at the Vanderbilt Eye Institute, agrees that "these types of patients are not common" and says that "we probably see about 20 cases a year at our center."
Yet, while the number of patients for MOOKP may never reach the number of patients getting the Boston Keratoprosthesis, Perez said he hopes to perform more of these procedures for those in need.
"Absolutely there are a lot of patients like her (Thornton), and also patients with chemical burns… we also want to work with the Department of Defense to help with soldiers who are scarred," said Perez.
ABC's Courtney Hutchison contributed to this report.


Click here to see the original article on the ABC News Webpage

Monday, September 14, 2009

"Light the Night" Walk to fight CANCER


Hello Stewart & Labbe Friends and Family. We need your help to make a difference for people with Leukemia and Lymphoma. Please read below and consider giving us your support...

Despite a slowing economy, the need for The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society’s (LLS) services continues to increase. Just this past year, more than 138,500 Americans were diagnosed with blood cancers. LLS funds lifesaving research and provides information, support and financial assistance to patients and their families. Without the help of contributors like YOU, none of these services would be possible.

This year, Stewart & Labbe Orthodontics is forming a fundraising team for LLS’s “Light The Night Walk” campaign. Light The Night is an annual evening walk that raises funds for LLS’s mission: Cure leukemia, lymphoma, Hodgkin’s disease and myeloma, and improve the quality of life of patients and their families.

Our local Walk will take begin at the Naval Academy Stadium on 10-4-09. We will start gathering around 5:00 pm for registration as well as the “opening ceremonies”. At 7:00 pm we will start walking! Each walker will have an illuminated balloon white for survivors, red for supporters and gold for those who have lost a loved one to blood cancer. It is a 2 mile walk in and around downtown Annapolis. We’re trying to recruit as many walkers as possible and raise at least $5000. We’re asking our patients, our families and our friends to join our team, the WIRE WALKERS featuring the Orthodonchicks.

If you would like to come on out on 10/4/09 and be a part of this magical night with us, please email Nikki at nikkid@stewartandlabbe.com. This will ensure that you get all the information necessary.
Can't make it that night? Please make a donation with your credit card to the Stewart & Labbe WIRE WALKERS featuring the Orthodonchicks on our homepage by clicking here.

If you would prefer to send cash or a check via mail, please send it to:
Stewart & Labbe Orthodontics
PO Box 642
Gambrills, MD 21054

Any amount that you give is so greatly appreciated. Together we WILL make a difference!

Friday, September 4, 2009


Could you imagine having a tooth that weighs 8 lbs?? That's how much an elephant tooth weighs. Amazing hugh? If you would like to learn more, check out this article from "CoolScienceFacts.com" on Jan. 31, 2007. I find elephants very interesting creatures and love the way they make me smile! What animals make you smile?

Whatever it is that makes you smile, I hope you do a lot of it this labor day weekend! Stay safe and enjoy...

Most mammals have a set of baby teeth that eventually fall out and are replaced by adult teeth, which they keep for their entire lives. Elephants are different, however. They go through six sets of large, brick-like teeth that grow in at the back of their mouths and slowly move to the front as they are worn down. The teeth then fall out and are replaced by fresh ones.

Consequently, elephants have no use for dentists, and have been known to laugh openly when they encounter dental hygienists on safari. There is evidence of elephants in the wild eating five hundred pounds of coconut macaroons in one day, without flossing.

Each set of elephant teeth that grows in is larger than the last. The final teeth are over eight inches long (21 cm) from front to back and weigh more than eight pounds (4 kg).

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Using a mouse to market the MOUSE!


This is a pretty GREAT job if you ask me! Talk about sharing your SMILE! Orlando, FL has chosen 2 friendly folks to experience all that Orlando has to offer…with Orlando picking up the tab! WHY? HOW? Well…the trick here is that the dynamic duo have to share their experience with the world by tweeting, blogging, facebooking, and youtubing the entire experience…that’s the low down of the download. If anything, it gives followers the opportunity to live vicariously through them! And you gotta admit…they are pretty adorable. Here’s more:
Kyle Post and Stacey Doornbos are spending 67 days experiencing everything Orlando has to offer and sharing each amazing experience with you. As Orlando's Smile Ambassadors, they will visit more than 100 Orlando attractions including everything from roller coaster riding to hang gliding, swimming with dolphins, spa-ing, golfing, gator wrestling, museum exploring, theatre-going, dining and more.
Kyle and Stacey were selected as Orlando's Smile Ambassadors after the Orlando CVB conducted a worldwide search for an adventurous duo with great smiles that resulted in hundreds of submissions from more than a dozen countries.
Follow along as Kyle and Stacey take on the top social media job in the world.

Click here to go to the official "67 Days of SMILES website!