Positive Health Online
Your Country
Dental Amalgam Fillings is the Number One Source of Mercury in People
listed in dentistry, originally published in issue 76 - May 2002
Dental Amalgam Fillings is the Number One Source of Mercury in People
and
Exposure Exceeds Government Health Standards for Inorganic mercury (vapor)
Government agencies and medical studies have found that the number one source of mercury in people is from dental amalgam fillings[2-20]. Exposure from fillings amounts to from 50 to 90 percent of exposure, with the average being about 80 % of total exposure[5-9,12-15,19,20]. The studies found that mercury amalgams are unstable due to mercury's low vapor pressure and galvanic action, leaking mercury vapor continuously into the lungs and saliva at levels exceeding health standards.
Mercury exposure of most people with fillings was found to exceed government health standards and levels found to cause adverse health effects(see below).
The U.S.EPA mercury health standard1 for elemental mercury exposure(vapor) is 0.3 micrograms per cubic meter of air(0.3 ug/M3). For the average adult breathing 20 M3 of air per day[2], this amounts to an exposure of 6 micrograms(ug) per day.
The corresponding tolerable daily exposure developed in a report for the Canadian Health Agency, Health Canada, is .014 ug/kg body weight or 1 ug/day for average adult2. The U.S. Agency for toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ASTDR) standard (MRL) -for acute inhalation exposure to mercury vapor is 0.02 micrograms Hg/m3, which translates to approx. 1.2 ug/day for the average adult.
The range of mercury exposure levels found in people with amalgam fillings by the World Health Organization Scientific Panel on Mercury was 3 to 70 micrograms per day[3], with other medical studies finding up to 200 ug/day in gum chewers or people who grind their teeth[6,11,16,17,18].
The average exposure was above 10 ug/day[3-18]. The average mercury exposure for a Canadian adult with amalgam fillings was found in the Health Canada study to be 9 ug/day[2]. In a large German study with 20,000 tested subjects at a University Medical Clinic, the average exposure from fillings was over 10 ug/day and over 50 % of all those with 6 or more amalgam fillings had daily exposure exceeding the EPA health guideline[17].
Studies have consistently found modern high copper non gamma-two amalgams have greater release of mercury vapor than conventional silver amalgams[21-23]. Recent studies have concluded that because of the high mercury release levels of modern amalgams, mercury poisoning from amalgam fillings is widespread throughout the population"[17,22,18].
Common levels found in persons with amalgam fillings are over 10 times the Health Canada TDE, and more than the EPA health standard for mercury vapor. Thus persons with amalgam fillings have levels of intraoral mercury vapor and body exposure levels higher than the level considered to have significant health risk.
The studies found that Total mercury intake is proportional to the number and extent of amalgam surfaces, but other factors such as chewing gum and drinking hot liquids influence the intake significantly increasing exposure as much as 500%. ).
A World Health Organzation Scientific Panel concluded that a safe level of mercury exposure below which no adverse effects occur has never been established3.
References
(1) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency(EPA), 1996, "Integrated Risk Information System, National Center for Invironmental Assessment", Cincinnati, Ohio(& web).
(2) Mark Richardson, Environmental Health Directorate, Health Canada, Assessment of Mercury Exposure and Risks from Dental Amalgam, 1995, Final Report, & G.M. Richardson et al,"A Monte Carlo Assessment of Mercury Exposure and Risks from Dental Amalgam", Human and Ecological Risk Assessment, 2(4): 709-761.
(3) World Health Organization(WHO),1991, Environmental Health criteria 118, Inorganic Mercury, WHO, Geneva; & W.Craelium, J Epidemiology and Community Health, 32:155-65,1978.
(4) Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, U.S. Public Health Service, "Toxicological Profile for Mercury" (ATSDR TP93/10), 1994.
(5) I.Skare, "Mass Balance and Systemic Uptake of Mercury Released from Dental Fillings", Water, Air, and Soil Pollution, 80(1-4):59-67, 1995.
(6) I.Skare et al, "Human Exposure to Hg and Ag Released from Dental Amalgam Restorations", Archives of Environmental Health 49(5): 384-394, 1994.
(7) J.A.Weiner et al,"The relationship between mercury concentration in human organs and predictor variables",138(1-3):101-115,1993; & "An estimation of the uptake of mercury from amalgam fillings", Sci Total Environmet, v168,n3,1995.
(8) A.Lussi, "Mercury release from amalgam into saliva", Schweiz Monatsschr ahnmed, 103(6):722-6,1993.
(9) M.J.Vimy and F.L. Lorscheider, Faculty of Medicine, Univ. Of Calgary, July 1991. (Study findings) & J. Trace Elem. Exper. Med., 1990,3, 111-123.
(10) D.D.Gay et al, 1979, Lancet, May 5, 1985 & C.W.Svare et al, J Dent Res, The effects of amalgams on mercury levels in expired air", 60, 1981, p1668-.
(11) L.Barregard et al, "People with high mercury uptake from their own dental amalgam fillings", Occup Envir Med, 1995, 52:124-128.
(12) L.Bjorkman et al, "Mercury in saliva and feces after removal of amalgam fillings", Toxicol Appl Pharmacol 1997, 144(1): 156-162.
(13) M.Molin et al, "kinetics of mercury in blood and urine after mercury removal" J Dent Research, 1995, 74:420-
(14) D.Zander et al, "Mercury Concentration in Urine in Relation to Number of amalgam Fillings", 1990, Zbl Hyg 190:325-334.
(15) J.Begerow et al, "Long Term Mercury Excretion in Urine after Removal of Amalgam Fillings", Int Arch Occup Health 66: 209-212.
(16) G.Sallsten et al, "long term use of chewing gum and mercury exposure from dental amalgam", J Dental Research, 1996, 75(1): 594-598.
(17) P.Kraub et al, Universitat Tubingen,Instit fur Organische Chemie, 1997, http://www.uni-tuebingen.de/KRAUSS/amalgam.html ; & I.Gerhard, E.Roller, et al, Tubingen Univ. Gynecological Clinic, Heidelberg,1996, BUND Press Release 1997 & Bundesinstitut fur Arzneimittel un Medizinprodukte, 1997.
(18) B.Windham, Anotated Bibliography of Exposure and Health Effects from Amalgam Fillings, 1997(over 400 references).
(19) Halbach, 1995,"Estimation of mercury dose ..", Int.Archieves of Occupational & Environmental Health, 67:295-300; & G. Sandborgh- Englund, "Pharmacokinetics of mercury from dental amalgam", Gotab(Stockholm), 1998, 1-49.
(20) H.V.Aposhian, Envir.Health Perspectives, Vol 106, Supp 4, Aug, 1998; & H.V. Aposhian et al, FASEB J, 6: 2472-2476, 1992.
(21) J Pleva, "Mercury- A Public Health Hazard", Reviews on Environmental Health, 1994, 10:1-27.
(22) C. Toomvali, "Studies of mercury vapor emission from different dental amalgam alloys", LIU-IFM-Kemi-EX 150,1988; & A. Berglund, "A study of the release of mercury vapor from different types of amalgam alloys", J Dent Res, 1993, 72:939-946; & D.B.Boyer, "Mercury vaporization from corroded dental amalgam" Dental Materials, 1988, 4:89-93; & V.Psarras et al, " Mercury vapour releases from dental amalgams", Swed Dent J,1994, 18:15-23; & L.E.Moberg, "Long term corrosion studies of amalgams and Casting alloys in contact", Act Odontal Scand 1985, 43:163-177; & L.E. Moberg, "Corrosion products from dental alloys", Published Dissertation, Stockholm, 1985.
(23) H. Lichtenberg, "Mercury vapor in the oral cavity in relation to the number of amalgam fillings and chronic mercury poisoning", Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine, 1996, 11:2, 87-94.
Comments:
-
No Article Comments available