#442 -- AP book of science --- History of my teeth, Archimedes Plutonium, King of Science// Medical Science by Archimedes Plutonium

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Archimedes Plutonium

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Dec 31, 2025, 8:37:55 PM12/31/25
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History of my teeth, Archimedes Plutonium, King of Science // Logic 


by Archimedes Plutonium



This is AP's #442 published book of science published on Internet, Plutonium-Atom-Universe,

PAU newsgroup is this.

https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en#!forum/plutonium-atom-universe 



Preface: I need to do a book of science on teeth, especially my teeth in hopes of future research into teeth. Also, I am exploring a "new technology" of what I call "teeth painting" composed of some sort of glue that has zirconium crystals. Paint it on teeth once every 10 years and no cavities and no need to brush. I have lived through the silver-mercury amalgam, then the composite resin, and then the ceramic-porcelain, and now the latest of zirconium.


I am exploring the possibility of a glue like paint that you no longer need to brush teeth, good for 10 years.


In that research, why not write a whole book on my dentistry and how I felt about my teeth in my lifetime.



Cover Picture: my iphone photograph of me at age 75 showing my teeth and especially my # 3 canine front tooth a dental implant colored blue.


#442 -- AP book of science --- History of my teeth, Archimedes Plutonium, King of Science// Medical Science by Archimedes Plutonium


AP

Archimedes Plutonium

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Dec 31, 2025, 8:56:46 PM12/31/25
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Just getting started on this book and mistakes already. The front two big teeth are called incisors, not canine.

My front incisor #8 is a blue zirconium implant in 2024, caused by my recklessness in eating a green apple and forcing a release of a bite into the apple. I really really should know better at my age of 74, that my teeth need far better care if I want to keep them.

My front incisor #9 is a gold crown.

Recently I did one of the dumbest things in life with my teeth. I like these organic candy power bars that are toffee like texture, and like them frozen. So, I bite into one recently and crushed one of my teeth that it broke. Now I have to fix that.

I am very sensitive to the issue of having all my teeth on the day I die. For I feel that ---- how well or how bad you take care of your teeth, summarizes how well or how bad you lived your life. I feel --- your teeth is a summary of your life. This feeling in me started at the young age of 2, 3, 4???? When I ran out of the house, the concrete porch in Germany fell down the steps and broke my teeth, and I cried profusely for not so much the pain, but that I had lost my teeth. I thought I would never have teeth again. Turns out, I lost only my baby teeth.

AP



On Wednesday, December 31, 2025 at 7:37:55 PM UTC-6 Archimedes Plutonium wrote:



History of my teeth, Archimedes Plutonium, King of Science // Logic 


by Archimedes Plutonium



This is AP's #442 published book of science published on Internet, Plutonium-Atom-Universe,

PAU newsgroup is this.

https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en#!forum/plutonium-atom-universe 



Preface: I need to do a book of science on teeth, especially my teeth in hopes of future research into teeth. Also, I am exploring a "new technology" of what I call "teeth painting" composed of some sort of glue that has zirconium crystals. Paint it on teeth once every 10 years and no cavities and no need to brush. I have lived through the silver-mercury amalgam, then the composite resin, and then the ceramic-porcelain, and now the latest of zirconium.


I am exploring the possibility of a glue like paint that you no longer need to brush teeth, good for 10 years.


In that research, why not write a whole book on my dentistry and how I felt about my teeth in my lifetime.



Cover Picture: my iphone photograph of me at age 75 showing my teeth and especially my #8 incisor front tooth a dental implant colored blue.

Archimedes Plutonium

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Dec 31, 2025, 9:06:58 PM12/31/25
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Now this is mysterious to me, as I am learning it just now in writing this book. That baby teeth make way for permanent teeth and start falling out at age 5-6. So I probably missed much of that experience of falling out baby teeth with my fall on concrete porch in Germany.

So why on Earth does biology need to evolve baby teeth before the adult teeth grow?? Do many other animals have this evolution feature???

AP

Archimedes Plutonium

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Jan 5, 2026, 8:42:46 PM (11 days ago) Jan 5
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So, well, there is this question of baby teeth evolution for me to explore and answer.

As a first off the top of my head guess, why have baby teeth first then permanent teeth later???

My guess comes from observations on my cats. I notice often a abandoned kitten. I have encountered such in about 10 kittens abandoned by its mother. Few survived.

My guess is that as they were suckling from their mother, their teeth bit into the mother's nipples, and the mother cat abandoned the kitten from that episode.

So a hypothesis is formed--- baby teeth were a needed step in evolution to get baby animals to suckle their mother. But the teeth had to be such that it did not bite off the mothers nipples. Same goes for apes then human  evolution.

A need of teeth, but teeth not damaging to the mother. And so, baby teeth evolved.

AP, King of Science

Archimedes Plutonium

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Jan 13, 2026, 4:19:12 AM (4 days ago) Jan 13
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Alright, yesterday found out some information on baby teeth being replaced by permanent teeth as to the Evolution of such. I thought maybe some part of the baby teeth carry into the formation of the permanent teeth. But apparently not.

---quoting from the Web---
They are needed to preserve space for adult teeth while they are forming under our gums and inside our jaws. Our baby teeth serves as placeholders until our adult teeth are ready to come in.
--- end quoting---

So that sounds logical and reasonable ____placeholders_____. I guess if they had not evolved, the permanent teeth would make our mouth a blood mess trying to appear.

AP

Archimedes Plutonium

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Jan 13, 2026, 4:34:11 AM (4 days ago) Jan 13
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I keep calling it a glue that is used to bond the tooth to a gold crown or nowadays zirconium crowns. It is properly called "cement".

So in this book, I am trying to forsee the next revolution in dentistry. I missed seeing that Zirconium would be the revolution in around 2005.

Perhaps there is a revolution in somehow using cement with zirconium plates and paint the teeth so you really do not have to brush for years, or floss. And every decade have a new paint job.

But better yet. There is a condition in many animals where they continually grow new teeth.

Humans grow baby teeth then permanent teeth and the growing ends there and is called "Diphyodonts", while "Polyphyodonts" keep growing new teeth throughout their life. For example sharks grow a new set of teeth every two weeks.

So, what I am thinking is for genetic engineering find out the DNA code of Polyphyodonts and start to research how we can engineer the genetics that every 20 years, humans can grow a new set of tooth or teeth.

Why, already I see news of a Japanese research at Kyoto University that a drug regrows human teeth.

AP

Archimedes Plutonium

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Jan 13, 2026, 8:58:47 PM (3 days ago) Jan 13
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I also at my age 76 am going to have to worry about Periodontal disease, gum disease caused by plaque buildup and harmful bacteria of Treponema denticola and Porphyromonas gingivalis.

So my new year's resolution for 2026 is no more bad eating habits that can be a loss of a tooth, and beware of gum disease.

I want all of my teeth on the very day I die.

As I keep saying--- how well you take care of your teeth is a direct reflection of how well you take care of your life in whole.

AP

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