Faculty
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Joseph I Helman DMD Professor and Chair |
jihelman@umich.edu |
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Dr. Helman maintains his focus on the surgical management of oral cancer as well as orthognathic surgery in patients with Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome. His current research focus is on Clinical Outcome Measures and his current projects are recurrence rates in the management of Odontogenic Keratocysts, success rates in the surgical treatment of Obstructive Sleep Apnea, and Maxillofacial findings on patients with Nevoid Basal Cell Carcinoma Syndrome (Gorlin Syndrome). | ||
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Sean P. Edwards DDS, MD Associate Professor Chief, Pediatric Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery |
seanedwa@umich.edu |
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Dr. Edwards, the Department's Chief of Pediatric Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, graduated from the Dalhousie University School of Dentistry and the University of Michigan Medical School. Dr Edwards obtained his residency here at the University of Michigan Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Department. After his residency, Dr Edwards completed fellowship training at the University of Pittsburgh in Craniofacial Surgery. Dr Edwards' clinical interests include craniomaxillofacial deformity, pediatric obstructive sleep apnea, cleft lip and palate, craniofacial trauma, and pediatric neoplasms of the craniomaxillofacial structures with research interests in craniofacial biology wound healing. | ||
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Stephen E Feinberg DDS, MS, PhD Professor Associate Chair & Director of Research |
sefein@umich.edu |
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Dr. Feinberg maintains his clinical activities and also has an active NIH-funded research program in tissue engineering. His main project is in the ex vivo development of a human full-thickness oral mucosal tissue that is suitable for intraoral grafting procedures. The long-term objective is to produce a "smart" transduced oral mucosal graft that will be used for reconstruction of major oral defects secondary to oncologic resection, traumatic events or developmental disturbances. The graft would act both as a material for reconstruction and as a repository for in situ transmucosal delivery of recombinant growth factors or cytokines. The goal is also to establish expanded cultures in an enriched population of oral mucosa progenitor/stem cells using only physical and pharmacological means under chemically defined conditions that will be the foundation for our advances into cell replacement therapy. His next step is to perform a FDA-approved Phase I/II clinical trial through the UM General Clinical Research Center in 2006. Dr. Feinberg's other area of research is in the development of 3-dimensional biomimetic scaffolds for tissue engineering of bone and/or cartilage for reconstruction of the temporomandibular joint. | ||
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Lina N Karam DMD Undergraduate Clinic Director |
lkaram@umich.edu |
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Dr. Karam is our newest faculty addition. Dr. Karam obtained her DMD from the University of Florida (1999), Internship in OMFS at Medical College of Virginia (2000), and trained in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at the Sinai/Henry Ford Residency Program (2000-2004) in Detroit. Dr. Karam is in charge of the pre-doctoral teaching program in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. In her own words "I like the students and I love teaching!" She is presently a member of the Curriculum Committee and the International Program Committee. | ||
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Carol Anne Murdoch-Kinch DDS, PhD Oral Radiologist Oral Medicine |
camurdoc@umich.edu |
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Dr. Murdoch-Kinch is studying oral health in patients after parotid-sparing radiation therapy of head and neck cancer. Unlike patients who receive standard radiation therapy (RT) and suffer from permanent xerostomia, patients treated with parotid-sparing RT, developed at University of Michigan, experience recovery of salivary function over time. She hypothesizes that this will translate into better oral health for our patients. | ||
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L George Upton DDS, MS Professor Co-Director of Dental/facial Program |
tmjdr@umich.edu |
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Dr. Upton continues his clinical research which has included comparing means of rigid fixation associated with LeFort I maxillary osteotomies, and comparing the outcomes of scalpel versus electro surgery in soft tissue incisions for orthognathic surgery. He is also trying to identify biomarkers for temporomandibular joint pathology by looking at several pro-inflammatory cytokines: Interleukin 1-Beta, Interleukin 6, and Interleukin 10. Groups looked at included controls, right and left side in symptomatic patients, and symptomatic patients over time. Preliminary data suggests that none of these pro inflammatory mediators may become reliable objective markers for symptomatic TM joints. | ||
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Brent B. Ward DDS, MD Assistant Professor and Program Director |
bward@umich.edu |
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Dr. Ward has been actively involved in the clinic and operating room, his research endeavors and as the Program Director of the residency and Head and Neck Oncology fellowship. | ||
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Wen-Xiang Zhang MD Co-Director of the Microsurgery Training Center |
wxzhang@umich.edu
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Dr. Zhang, the Co-Director of our Microsurgical Training Center has trained numerous residents and specialists from around the world in the art of vascular and neural microsurgery. He is collaborating on a federally funded research project with Drs. David Humes (Internal Medicine) and Dave Brown (Plastic Surgery) developing an experimental model for a tissue engineered kidney. | ||
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Samuel R Zwetchkenbaum DDS Program Director, General Practice Residency in Hospital Dentistry |
szwetch@umich.edu |
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Dr. Zwetchkenbaum is Section Chief of Hospital Dentistry at the University of Michigan School of Dentistry and U of M Health System. He received his D.D.S. at the University of North Carolina in 1987 and completed a General Practice Residency at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis. Following a period of dental practice at both a community health center and nursing home in his native Rhode Island, he returned for advanced training in Prosthodontics and then Maxillofacial Prosthodontics at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. Current clinical care involves maxillofacial prosthodontics and hospital dentistry. He is the program director of U of M's general practice residency where recent dental graduates train in care of medically compromised and developmentally disabled patients. | ||
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Allen W Weiss DDS, MS Adjunct Clinical Professor |
allweiss@umich.edu |
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Dr Weiss received his DDS from the University of Michigan School of Dentistry. Following a period in general practice, he returned to the University of Michigan Graduate Program and completed the Residency Program in Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery. He entered private practice of oral surgery and since 1969 has continued his teaching affiliation with the school. He currently teaches both oral and maxillofacial surgery residents and predoctoral students in the Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery Clinic as an adjunct professor. |
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