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Silver
Fillings: Mercury Risks
for Health, Hearing Loss & Tinnitus
by
Barry Keate
I
have received numerous questions about the safety
of mercury in dental fillings and whether it poses
a risk to people with tinnitus or is a possible cause
of tinnitus. Having many dental fillings myself, some
dating from the 1960’s, I decided to research
this important question.
Mercury
is a known neurotoxin and leads to numerous neurological
problems, including hearing loss and tinnitus. On
this there is universal agreement. A dispute arises,
however, about whether or not dental fillings add
to mercury exposure in people. That is the subject
of this article.
The
Internet is full of horror stories about mercury poisoning.
But just because they are found on the Internet, can
they be believed? Websites promise miracle cures for
tinnitus, some saying it will disappear in minutes.
Miracle cure weight loss programs and other quackery
abound.
So
I decided I was not going to be influenced by anecdotal
stories, no matter how horrifying, but would look
only at the scientific evidence. I was quite surprised
at what I found.
First,
it is necessary to discuss the details of dental amalgam
fillings and a history of their use.
Amalgam
History
Dental amalgam fillings are commonly referred
to as “silver fillings” but are really
approximately 50% elemental mercury. Silver comprises
25-35% of the filling and the balance is varying combinations
of tin, copper and zinc. Mercury, which is liquid
at room temperature, dissolves many other metals.
Silver, tin, copper and zinc powders are dissolved
in liquid mercury to make amalgam. It takes a while
for the silver and other metals to dissolve and, as
they do, the amalgam hardens and assumes a permanent
shape. Amalgam is placed in a cavity during the hardening
process so it is pliable at first, and then hardens
in the mouth.
In
17th and 18th century America, dentistry was a subspecialty
of medicine. Painful or decayed teeth were either
pulled or cavities were filled with molten gold –
a painful and expensive procedure.
In 1833 two French dentists immigrated to the United
States and introduced the use of amalgam as a dental
restoration material. The medical community was well
aware of the toxicity of mercury. 19th century hat
makers were known to go insane from felting hats with
a mercury solution. Lewis Carroll made that knowledge
part of popular fiction with the Mad Hatter in the
novel, Alice in Wonderland. Nonetheless, amalgam was
inexpensive and easy to work with and grew in popularity.
In 1843, the American Society of Dental Surgeons (ASDS),
the only US dental association at the time, declared
the use of dental amalgam to be malpractice and forced
all of its members to sign a pledge to abstain from
using it. The ASDS also ran the two French dentists
out of the country. This was the beginning of what
are known in dentistry as the Amalgam Wars.
However, the ease of use, the low cost and low pain
of dental amalgams led to its continued increase.
In 1844 it was reported that 50% of all dental restoration
in upstate New York consisted of amalgam. As the use
of amalgam grew, the ASDS fell apart and in 1859 the
pro-amalgam faction formed the American Dental Association
(ADA), the same organization that leads the dental
profession in the US today, and remains steadfast
in it’s defense of amalgam.
The second amalgam war was provoked in the 1920’s
by Professor Alfred E. Stock, a leading chemist at
the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Germany. Adverse effects
on his own health from mercury in the lab led him
to question the supposed safety of mercury from dental
amalgam. His research, concluding there were adverse
health effects, was published in leading scholarly
journals of the day. It touched off a debate that
raged through the 1930’ without a clear resolution,
only to fade away in the storm of World War II.
We
are currently in the advanced stages of the third
amalgam war. The argument was opened in the late 1970’s,
as modern methods of detecting the presence of trace
amounts of mercury in the body were introduced, including
mass spectrophotometry and the Jerome mercury vapor
detector.
The
ADA maintains that dental amalgam is safe and inert.
On its website, it states, “Dental amalgam contains
elemental mercury combined with other metals such
as silver, copper, tin and zinc to form a safe, stable
alloy. Dental amalgam has been used for generations
to fill decayed teeth that might otherwise have been
lost to decay.” 1
In
1990, the ADA adopted an ethical rule (5A), which
prohibits dentists from removing amalgam “for
the alleged purpose of removing toxic substances from
the body when performed solely at the recommendation
or suggestion of the dentist...”
Oregon law provides that a dentist can be disciplined,
including loss of license, for commission of a fraud
against a dental consumer. They then deemed it a fraud
to recommend the removal of an amalgam for the purpose
of removing a toxin. Actions by the Oregon ACLU resulted
in the removal of this policy in 2003.
While it isn’t clear if the ADA coined the phrase
“silver fillings,” it is clear that the
term is the descriptor of choice by the ADA and most
dentists. The ADA’s website and its brochures,
which are given to patients, consistently refer to
these fillings as “silver fillings” or
as “dental amalgam” but never as “mercury
fillings.”
While the ADA is providing dentists with brochures
to calm patients concerns about the safety of amalgam,
the amalgam manufacturers place inserts with their
product that warn dentists of health risks from amalgam.
In 1997, Dentsply, a leading amalgam manufacturer,
disclosed that amalgam is a neurotoxin (toxic to the
brain and central nervous system), a nephrotoxin (toxic
to the kidneys) and a lung and skin sensitizer.
The ADA’s position on the safety of amalgam
has been made even more untenable by the fact that
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has declared
amalgam to be a hazardous material and issues specific
instructions for its handling and disposal. 2
The Science
I began a search for the clinical evidence that would
prove or disprove the safety of dental amalgam fillings.
For certain, there are some studies that show no harm
from the fillings and these are used by the ADA to
make their case.
The
ADA website states, “Two studies in the April
19, 2006 issue of the “Journal of the American
Medical Association” conclude that children
with dental amalgam fillings do not experience adverse
effects related to neurobehavioral, neuropsychological
(IQ) and kidney function reinforcing the ADA’s
longstanding position on the safety of dental amalgam.”
According
to JAMA, both articles, “Neurobehavioral Effects
of Dental Amalgam in Children” and “Neuropsychological
and Renal Effects of Dental Amalgam in Children”
are the first randomized controlled trials comparing
the health effects in children treated with amalgam
fillings with those treated with composite resins.”
3
We
do not know for how long the children were followed.
Mercury poisoning is cumulative and not expected to
show immediate symptoms.
Similarly,
a study published in the “International Journal
of Epidemiology"” followed 20,000 people
with dental amalgam fillings and looked for evidence
of multiple sclerosis and chronic fatigue syndrome.
They concluded, “Results were generally reassuring,
and provide only limited evidence of an association
between amalgam and disease.” 4 However, all
the people in the study were under 26 years of age!
Then,
I found studies that were very critical of amalgam
fillings and deemed them a health hazard. Researchers
in New York concluded that mercury vapor continually
leaches from amalgam fillings at a rate of about 10-50
times the safe limit (then at 0.28 micrograms/day).
They stated that mercury has been linked to birth
defects, multiple sclerosis, fatigue, Alzheimer’s
disease, depression, anxiety, reduced immune function,
antibiotic resistance and impaired kidney function.
The found mercury to be a potent killer of white blood
cells and that proper removal of amalgam fillings
will restore white blood counts to healthy levels.
There is also evidence that the number of T-cells
(an important part of immune defenses) decreases substantially
when amalgam fillings are placed in the mouth, but
increases again once the fillings are removed. 5
Researchers
at the Rocky Mountain Institute report that removal
of amalgam fillings can markedly improve the symptoms
of manic-depressive illness (bipolar disorder). The
concentration of mercury vapor in the mouth was measured
at the start of the study and was found to increase
almost 300% after chewing gum for 10 minutes. Other
research has shown that 75% or more of the mercury
vapor released by chewing gum is inhaled into the
lungs where it enters the blood stream and subsequently
passes into the brain. Some of the patients were assigned
to have all their fillings removed and were later
compared to those who didn’t. All were followed
for 6 to 8 months after treatment. It was very clear
that the patients who had their fillings removed had
significant improvements in anxiety, depression, paranoia,
hostility and obsessive-compulsive behavior. Some
of them were able to discontinue their lithium treatment.
6
Hearing
Loss
Of particular interest to people with hearing loss
and tinnitus, researchers have linked mercury to hearing
loss and multiple sclerosis. We know that hearing
loss has a direct impact on tinnitus. This study involved
seven women who had been diagnosed with MS. They underwent
a standard hearing test then all their amalgam fillings
were removed. Six to eight months later they retook
the hearing test. Six of the seven had significant
hearing improvement in the right ear and five of the
seven had improvement in the left ear. Hearing improved
an average of 8 dB. The researchers concluded that
amalgam fillings may be a significant factor in hearing
loss experienced by MS patients and could be a factor
in hearing loss for others as well. 7
So
far, it is not looking like mercury amalgam fillings
are as harmless as the ADA would like us to believe.
However, the most shocking evidence I found is yet
to come and, with it, a graphic video of exactly what
happens to amalgam fillings in our mouths as they
age.
In
following links and different search queries, I came
upon the website for the International Academy of
Oral Medicine and Toxicology (IAOMT). This group was
founded by a small number of dentists in 1984 that
were concerned about amalgam fillings and decided
to research the scientific literature. The IAOMT has
since grown to 500 members in North America and affiliated
chapters in 14 other countries. Its Scientific Advisory
Committee includes a former Chairman of the Department
of Chemistry at the University of Kentucky, a Professor
of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences
at the University of Washington, a Professor of Pathology
at the University of Arkansas, and so on. Their aim
is to promote biocompatible approaches to dentistry,
endodontics, periodontics and disease prevention.
Their
main article about amalgam fillings is titled “The
Scientific Case Against Amalgam” and lists fully
97 clinical studies that support their conclusions.
8 It also includes a video of an extracted tooth containing
an old amalgam filling. The tooth is held in the light
of a miner’s black light, a pure mercury vapor
discharge lamp. The only vapor that can absorb the
wavelength of a mercury emission light and cast a
shadow is mercury vapor. The video clearly shows gaseous
clouds of mercury vapor being released by the amalgam
filling. It is shocking and convincing; everyone should
see it.
Below
is the the video “Smoking Tooth.” It lasts
about 8 minutes. I encourage you watch it all the
way through. It is literally jaw-dropping. Make sure
the sound is on so you can hear the narrative.
To
my mind, this amazing video pretty much closes the
case on mercury amalgam. But let’s continue
the discussion.
The
current best accepted reference on absorbed mercury
from amalgam fillings comes from the World Health
Organization proceeding of 1991. 9 This was the report
of a meeting of toxicologists and environmental health
specialists with few dentists and no industry lobbyists
invited. The conclusion was that the average person
in the industrial world with an average number of
amalgam fillings and no occupational exposure to mercury
would absorb between 3 – 17 micrograms per day,
with an average of 10 micrograms, from the fillings;
2.3 micrograms from all dietary sources; and 0.3 micrograms
from all other environmental sources. This totals,
on average, 12.6 micrograms per day. The current allowable
of safe intake of mercury has recently been reduced
to 0.1 micrograms/ day per kilogram of body weight,
set by the US Public Health Service. For me, at 170
lbs, the maximum allowable dosage would be about 7.5
micrograms per day. Many scientists think even this
reduced allowable dosage is much too high.
In
the late 1980’s, researchers in Calgary, Canada,
used radioactive mercury to examine the question of
tissue retention of mercury from amalgam fillings.
They placed twelve fillings tagged with radioactive
mercury in the mouth of a sheep. After 29 days, the
sheep was killed and the radioactive fillings were
removed. The sheep was then placed in a full body
gamma ray scanner. 10
They
found a high concentration of radioactivity in the
mouth and jawbone from the fillings. The highest concentration
of mercury was the kidneys, 7438 nanograms per gram
of tissue (ng/g). The urine concentration was only
4.7 ng/g, demonstrating the inadequacy of urine samples
as an indicator of mercury storage in internal organs.
The order of magnitude of mercury accumulation in
liver and kidneys was confirmed by further studies
using radioactive fillings in sheep.
Of
particular importance to this study is there is no
radioactive mercury in nature, so any of it found
in the sheep’s body could only have come from
the fillings.
This
in-depth article covers many other aspects of the
problem of mercury vapor from amalgam fillings. There
is far too much material to cover in this article.
The website is listed in the endnotes of this article
(#8) for those who wish to read it in its entirety.
There
is now a significant body of evidence establishing
a chain of toxic events:
-
amalgam releases significant amounts of mercury
vapor;
-
the mercury distributes to tissues around the
body and is the biggest source of mercury body
burden;
-
the mercury from amalgam crosses the placenta
and into breast milk, resulting in significant
pre- and post-partum exposures for infants;
-
adverse physiological changes occur from that
exposure on the immune, renal (kidneys), reproductive
and central nervous systems.
Other
effects of mercury poisoning include multiple sclerosis,
Alzheimer’s disease, chronic fatigue syndrome,
sensory impairment (vision, hearing, speech), disturbed
sensation and a lack of coordination, peripheral neuropathy
(itching, burning or pain), profuse sweating, tachycardia
(persistently faster than normal heart beat), kidney
dysfunction, neuropsychiatric symptoms (emotional
instability, memory impairment, insomnia) and hypertension
(increased blood pressure).
Writing
this article has alerted me to the dangers of amalgam
fillings. I had about half of mine removed this spring,
although the reason was they were so old they were
cracking and falling out. I will have the rest of
them removed and replaced with composite fillings
before the end of the year.
My
dentist did warn me that during removal, there could
be a surge of released mercury vapor. It should be
handled by a practitioner who is knowledgeable on
the best removal techniques. Also, it can take a year
or longer for the mercury in the body to clear. Daily
use of high quality multivitamins and antioxidants
help to chelate the mercury and remove it faster.
References
- http://www.ada.org/public/media/releases/6009_released01.asp
- Null,
G. Feldman, M. Mercury dental amalgams: the controversy
continues. Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine,
Vol. 17, No. 2, 2nd Quarter 2002, pp 85-110
- http://www.ada.org/prof/resources/pubs/adanews
/adanewsarticle.asp?articleid+1881
- Bates,
M. Fawcett, J. Garrett, N. Cutress, T. Kjellstrom,
T. Health effects of dental amalgam exposure:
a retrospective cohort study, International Journal
of Epidemiology 2004;33(4):894-902.
- Null,
G. Feldman, M. Mercury dental amalgams: the controversy
continues. Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine,
Vol. 17, No. 2, 2nd Quarter 2002, pp 85-110.
- Siblerud,
R. et al. Psychometric evidence that dental amalgam
mercury may be an etiological factor in manic
depression. Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine,
Vol. 13, No. 1, First Quarter 1998, pp. 31-40.
-
Siblerud, R. Kienholz, E. Evidence that mercury
from dental amalgam may cause hearing loss in
multiple sclerosis patients.Journal
of Orthomolecular Medicine, Vol.11, No. 2, Second
Quarter 1996, pp. 87-94.
- http://www.iaomt.org/articles
/category_view.asp?intReleaseID=193&catid=30
-
World Health Organization: Environmental Health
Criteria, Vol. 118: Inorganic Mercury. Page 61.
WHO, Geneva, Switzerland, 1991.
- Hahn,
LJ. Kloiber, R. Leininger, RW. Vimy, MJ. Lorscheider,
FL. Dental “silver” tooth fillings:
a source of mercury exposure revealed by whole
body scan and tissue analysis. FASEB J, 3:2641-6,
1989.
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