It was only after her natural teeth had been pulled in preparation for full implants that Louise Schostek learned of trouble at Woodbury Dental Arts, her dentist’s office. The extractions had been in January, and when she returned in February to see if her mouth was ready for procedures that would restore her smile, Schostek, 74, realized that several members of the staff were gone.
A staff member assured Schostek — who paid $25,000 up front — that the office wasn’t closing. But a month later, with no warning other than a paper sign taped to the front door, and before Schostek’s dental work was complete, Woodbury Dental Arts closed for good.
“It’s been a nightmare,” said Schostek, who retired in 2018 after 47 years selling sewing machines, vacuums and appliances at the St. Paul Sears store. She figures she’ll never see her money returned.
Unknown to Schostek and many other patients, the primary dentist behind Woodbury Dental Arts, Marko Kamel, spent much of 2023 and early 2024 under a cloud of regulatory discipline. After receiving reports from patients and a University of Minnesota oral surgeon about substandard care, painful results and questionable practices, the State Board of Dentistry twice temporarily suspended Kamel’s license in May and November 2023.
On Jan. 19 — days before a dentist working for Kamel extracted Schostek’s teeth — an administrative law judge recommended the Board of Dentistry take “disciplinary action” against Kamel’s license. The board ordered Kamel’s license suspended indefinitely on March 5.
Kamel did not respond to requests for comment.
The case has prompted questions about the oversight of dentists, notifications when a dentist is disciplined — and about whether Kamel’s patients will ever recoup the large deposits they put down for dental implants, which are typically not covered by insurance. Some 55 patients who had paid $1 million in deposits were left with uncompleted work when Kamel’s office shut down, according to court documents. Kamel’s business has filed for bankruptcy.
Woodbury police say they are investigating Kamel and Woodbury Dental Arts, and the Minnesota Attorney General’s office is also monitoring the case, a spokesman said.