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The Beginning of the End for Amalgams in the US
By Kathryn
Kranhold Dentists are suing state regulators over what they contend is a gag order preventing
them from discussing with patients the potential health hazards of the most
common form of dental filling. At issue are those silver-colored fillings that dot most people's teeth.
Referred to by the dental profession as silver amalgam, the fillings are actually about half mercury, with some silver, copper, tin and zinc mixed in. Mercury opponents argue that mercury vapor coming from the fillings seeps
into the body, contributing to a range of health problems from fatigue and
immunity suppression to neurological diseases such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's. The suit was filed in federal court in Greenbelt, Md., by five dentists
and seven patients claiming injury from the mercury in their fillings. The
plaintiffs argue that dental regulators use "control of dental licenses to
punish, or to threaten punishment of, dentists who criticize mercury
amalgam," violating the dentists' First Amendment rights. In 1999, for example, the suit claims that the Maryland Board of Dental
Examiners ordered dentist Bill DeLong to stop testing his patients to determine
whether mercury vapor was coming off their fillings. (The case was eventually
dropped.) The dentists' attorney, Charles Brown of Washington, D.C., says the
plaintiffs want the court to order licensing boards to stop enforcing any policy
that "prevents, limits or intimidates dentists" from discussing the
controversy or advocating "mercury-free" dentistry. The suit also
seeks certification as a defendants' class action naming 50 of the country's 52
licensing agencies. The dental establishment maintains that some dentists have used the
controversy over mercury's safety to encourage patients to remove amalgam
fillings and replace them with more expensive materials such as gold, porcelain
and a tooth-colored resin composite. Resin, the least expensive alternative,
costs as much as 25% more than fillings containing mercury. Nevertheless, state
legislatures in New York and Maine are debating bills that would require
dentists to disclose to patients the makeup of their fillings. New York Assemblyman Richard Brodsky's bill would also ban dentists from filling cavities in
pregnant women and children with mercury. A Vermont bill would require dental offices to track how much mercury
they use in fillings. And California's dental board is considering spelling out
the pros and cons of different fillings in a consumer fact sheet. Minnesota's dental board may also become more amenable to alternatives to mercury. In 1999, Minneapolis dentist Ronald King, who advertises "dental care that integrates conventional and alternative philosophy," was appointed to the board by Gov. Jesse Ventura. He is now on a committee that hears complaints about dentists, including mercury-free dentists. Dr. King says other board members now see him "as a colleague instead of a weird guy with his own agenda." The Amalgam Wars began in the mid-1800s, when dentists first started
using mercury-based material to treat tooth decay. Originally, it was the
dentists who used mercury who came under fire from colleagues who didn't believe
it was as safe as gold or tooth extractions. But soon, mercury became the material of choice,
mostly because it was cheaper and easier to use -- and it was less painful than having hot gold
poured into a tooth. In 1976, when the U.S. Food and Drug Administration began regulating
medical devices, it grandfathered in mercury-based fillings as an approved
dental material. The ADA, which once had a patent on mercury fillings, maintains that
mercury is safe once it is mixed with other metals and set in teeth, but it
warns dentists about the "potential hazard of mercury vapor" when they
handle the material. In a 1999 report, the Agency of Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, a
division of the US Department of Health and Human Services, concluded there is
no apparent health hazard but urged further study to "determine the
possibility of more subtle behavioral or immune-system effects, and to determine
the level of exposure that may lead to adverse effects in sensitive
populations." Fillings could contribute as much as 75% of a person's daily
mercury exposure, the
report said, noting that the vapor is released during chewing and because of
corrosion.
Judith Baker, a South Bend, Ind., accountant and a plaintiff in the
Maryland suit, was so sick she had her gallbladder removed in 1999. But another
doctor later diagnosed her with mercury poisoning stemming from a new filling containing mercury and the replacement of two old
mercury fillings with a larger one. Ms. Baker says she was skeptical and had her well water tested for
mercury and her house tested for fumes before asking a dentist to remove her
fillings earlier this year. She says she is starting to feel better after going
through mercury detoxification treatment. Boyd Haley, a University of Kentucky chemist who has published several
studies using rats and human brain samples, says his work shows that brain tissue exposed to mercury develops
the same biochemical defects seen in Alzheimer's disease. But even Dr. Haley doesn't theorize that the fillings cause significant
adverse health effects in everyone. "Certain patients, due to genetics or
illness or other toxic exposures, could be more sensitive to the amount of
mercury normally released from dental amalgams," he says. The ADA responds by pointing to a study published in its journal that
concluded that mercury in fillings "does not appear" to be a factor in
the development of Alzheimer's disease. But one of the study's authors, chemist
Charles Cornett, is wary of that conclusion. He says the study failed to
evaluate how different people process mercury, among other factors. Two large clinical trials sponsored by the National Institutes of Health
are now under way with the goal of determining how school children with and
without mercury fillings develop. Results of those studies won't be known until
at least 2005.
Meanwhile, the Maryland board is proposing a new rule that states that
removing "serviceable mercury amalgam restorations" is unprofessional
without informed consent that includes telling the patient that "there are
no verifiable systemic health benefits resulting from the removal." The Wall Street Journal May 10, 2001 Page B1
DR. MERCOLA'S COMMENT: I went to Washington D.C. a few weeks ago to
participate in a National Press Conference. I was a bit disappointed in the
turnout; however, it does appear that this article in the Wall Street Journal is
a direct result of the press conference. Eventually the truth will come out and it will
likely be as a result of legal actions. The unfortunate problem is that if
mercury is finally recognized as the true toxic poison that it is, there will be
trillions, not billions, of dollars of damages that the dental profession will
be liable for. This will make the tobacco litigation look like
small potatoes. It will be interesting to see this develop, but in
the meantime, please refrain from using any dentist who currently puts amalgam
fillings in your mouth. If they are still doing that, they are clueless about
the dangers of mercury. Eventually the mercury will cause serious
neurtoxicity in your dentist and limit their ability to provide the type of care
that you will need. |
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