University of Illinois at Chicago College of Dentistry


The University of Illinois at Chicago College of Dentistry evolved from the Columbian Dental College, founded in Chicago in 1891.
The college informally affiliated with the University of Illinois in 1901, and was chartered as an official college of the university in 1913.

Programs

The college offers a four-year DMD degree, a two and a half year DMD-Advanced Standing, PhD and MS degrees in oral sciences, and six advanced education/residency certificate programs.
The college provides community oral health outreach service and to serving the under-served, providing nearly $1 million in uncompensated care to indigent dental patients annually. It also provides dental services for senior citizens and children in collaboration with the Chicago Department of Public Health. Faculty and students participate in health fairs and clinics in elementary schools, long-term care facilities, churches, and Head Start programs. More than 100,000 patients are treated each year in its clinics.

Research

The college has research and treatment centers in various specialties: endodontics, oral and maxillofacial surgery, oral biology, oral medicine and diagnostic sciences, orthodontics, pediatric dentistry, periodontics, and restorative dentistry. The college is home to the Center for Wound Healing and the Brodie Lab for Craniofacial Genetics.

Notable faculty of the past

The college was the top dental school in the United States in the 1930s and 1940s, as several members of dentistry's "Vienna Group," top dental faculty with European backgrounds, including Dr. Harry Sicher and Dr. Joseph-Peter Weinmann, joined its faculty.
Dr. John V. Borden, a 1939 alumnus, was the inventor of the Borden Airotor, a high-speed dental handpiece, the basic tool of modern dentistry.
The research of Dr. Bernard G. Sarnat, a 1940 alumnus, head of the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at the college from 1946 to 1956, is considered the basis for the modern understanding of craniofacial surgery.
Dr. Isaac Schour, dean of the college from 1956 to 1964, was the discoverer of "growth rings" in teeth. He and Dr. Maury Massler, who established the college's Department of Pediatric Dentistry and served as its head from 1946 to 1965, created a seminal chart of tooth development.
Faculty members Dr. Earl W. Renfroe, a 1931 alumnus, and Dr. Thomas K. Barber, a 1949 alumnus, wrote what is considered the seminal article originating the concepts of preventive and interceptive orthodontics for the Journal of the American Dental Association in 1957.
Dr. E. Lloyd Du Brul taught oral anatomy at the college for 50 years. The college's Du Brul Archives Room houses his collection of human, animal, and prehistoric skulls and jawbones.
Dr. Allan G. Brodie Sr., who earned two degrees from the University of Illinois, established the college's postgraduate program in orthodontics in his 1929 book, The Dentofacial Complex, which was considered so important that it was republished nearly 30 years after his death.

Notable alumni