Health & Wellbeing

Painless electrical zaps may replace dental anesthesia needles

Painless electrical zaps may replace dental anesthesia needles
Before too long, this may no longer be necessary
Before too long, this may no longer be necessary
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Before too long, this may no longer be necessary
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Before too long, this may no longer be necessary

As much as some people fear getting dental fillings or root canals, what many of them are really afraid of is the needle that delivers the anesthetic into the mouth tissue. Even though the skin in the "jabbing area" is usually pretreated with a topical anesthetic, it can still hurt. Before long, however, a shot of electricity could make that topical treatment deep-acting enough that the needle isn't even needed.

In a recent study, scientists from the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil combined two commonly-used anesthetic drugs – prilocaine hydrochloride and lidocaine hydrochloride – with a polymer to form a hydrogel. The polymer was included to make it sticky, so that it could be applied to the lining of a pig's mouth.

Using a process known as iontophoresis, a mild and painless electrical current was then passed through the hydrogel. As a result, there was a 12-fold increase in how well the prilocaine hydrochloride permeated through the tissue. The anesthetic effect was claimed to be not only fast-acting, but also long-lasting.

The scientists are now developing an iontophoretic device designed specifically for use on the mouth, although the technology – or offshoots of it – could have other applications.

"Over the last few years, our research group has been working on the development of novel drug delivery systems for the treatment of several skin and eye diseases," says Prof. Renata Fonseca Vianna Lopez. "The skin and eyes pose challenges for drug delivery, so we have focused on improving drug delivery in these organs using nanotechnology, iontophoresis and sonophoresis, which is permeation using sound waves."

A paper on the research was recently published in the journal Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces.

Source: Elsevier

3 comments
3 comments
Smitty Jl
Please let this be true!!!
guzmanchinky
Oh yes please. And whatever happened to the process they were working on to kill plaque causing bacteria in the mouth, such that dental cleanings would become a thing of the past???
Robert in Vancouver
I hope this makes it into the marketplace, and my dentists office. Most great new things I read about here don't get out of the lab.