For Dr. Giuseppe Cicero dentistry has always been a dream and a way of life. He always imagined following in his father’s footsteps and becoming a dental professional. He began observing at his father’s practices in Rome, Italy at the age of 14 and has not stopped. He graduated cum laude from the University of Tor Vergata in Rome, completing his dental education and graduating with a Doctor of Dental Surgery degree. Following his degree, he was recognized for his exceptional academic record and clinical skills and was accepted to spend his fourth year of dental school at the University of Valencia, Spain. Dr.Cicero spent a full year in the oral surgery and aesthetics department.
Following completion of that program, Dr. Cicero practiced for one year as a general dentist in his family offices in Rome, Palermo and Marsala and then pursued a Post-Graduate Periodontics program at the New York University where he completed a three year Periodontics and Implant Surgery residency. Dr. Cicero is the proud founder of a specialized dental 3D printing technology, the Oral3D. He has been recognized as a world renowned periodontist and was proudly published in one of Forbes Top 30 Under 30.
Dr.Cicero is a member of several professional organizations including:
The American Academy of Periodontology
The International Congress of Oral Implantologists, Fellow
The Academy for Dental Facial Esthetics, Fellow
A large component of Dr. Cicero’s work is focused on education and research as evidenced by his extensive research on Dental Pulp Stem Cells and his direction of countless research projects on dental pulp stem cells and bone regeneration. He has developed clinical protocols for soft and hard tissue regeneration in the Aesthetic Zone and introducing the application of 3D printing technology in Guided Bone Regeneration. He continues to lecture throughout the United States, Italy, and Spain and has published articles on Periodontal Soft and Hard tissue grafting, oral melanoma, dental pulp stem cell culturing and a book on “Dental Pulp stem cells of deciduous teeth”.