Health & Wellbeing

Zaamigo tooth-checking device puts an AI camera in your mouth

Zaamigo tooth-checking device puts an AI camera in your mouth
The Zaamigo device – which looks like an electric toothbrush but isn't one – sells for $100
The Zaamigo device – which looks like an electric toothbrush but isn't one – sells for $100
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The Zaamigo device – which looks like an electric toothbrush but isn't one – sells for $100
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The Zaamigo device – which looks like an electric toothbrush but isn't one – sells for $100
Examples of the Zaamigo's tooth pics
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Examples of the Zaamigo's tooth pics

While there are camera-equipped toothbrushes that let users see how well they're cleaning their teeth, the Zaamigo goes considerably further. It uses AI to analyze the photos it shoots, in order to monitor the health of its user's teeth and gums.

Developed by ETH Zurich spin-off company Zaamigo, the device of the same name has the form factor of an electric toothbrush, but it isn't used for brushing the teeth. Instead of a ring of rotating bristles, it features a tiny waterproof digital camera surrounded by a ring of eight LEDs.

After brushing their teeth with a conventional third-party toothbrush, users stick the head of the Zaamigo in their mouth, and utilize it to take a total of six photos of their upper and lower teeth.

Those images are wirelessly transmitted to an iOS app on their iPhone or iPad, where artificial-intelligence-based algorithms check for stains, inflamed gums, and accumulated calculus (aka tartar). The algorithms were developed by having a panel of dental experts analyze a database of thousands of Zaamigo-captured images, identifying the problems present in each one.

Examples of the Zaamigo's tooth pics
Examples of the Zaamigo's tooth pics

Depending on what's detected, the app will either advise users on how to improve their brushing/flossing technique, or it will tell them to visit their dentist. In fact, although the Zaamigo is being marketed mainly to the public, some dentists are reportedly already using the device in their clinics.

It should be noted that the technology is currently not able to detect cavities. The developers hope that such functionality will become possible as the AI is developed further, along with the ability to detect problems such as periodontal disease or nocturnal teeth grinding.

Should you be interested, the Zaamigo is available now, priced at US$100. It's demonstrated in the following video.

Zaamigo: Check your teeth yourself. How it works.

Sources: ETH Zurich, Zaamigo

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