No. The artist in me commands that I go on a massively unhealthy binge diet of every item that can be found in a Wal Mart’s frozen breakfast foods section, starting with chocolate chip pancakes and sausage on a stick. After a year or two of this, with my weight ballooning up to 400 pounds, I shall then go on the Subway diet and drop to 180. And that is where I shall find all the additional skin I need to create my own set of lampshades as well as a photo album of my journey, naturally to be bound in my own skin.
If the goal is to remove the organic components so the precious metal bits can be sold, you don’t need to go to all that effort. As noted in the article I linked above, the buyers will deal with the organic stuff themselves. The bigger outfits will anyway. The pawnshop on the corner may be a bit more fussy.
If we’re just talking hypotheticals, then I’d use heat. A common household torch should be able to heat things up enough to degrade the organic material. Heating it up and dropping it into a glass of water might even cause enough temperature shock to break up the tooth.
I recommend against this. Gold has a low melting point. Kilns get up in the thousands of degrees. I’d worry the gold will vaporize and be pushed out the exhaust fan.
I once put a nickel and a penny in a piece. The nickel blackened. The penny became some frothy yellow crystals.
ETA
Unless you’d get more money, why not just sell the gold as is? Personally, I have some teeth with gold fillings an uncle saved and left me when he died.