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Website: Dr. Tom McGuire's Dental Wellness Institute Dr. Tom McGuire has been a mercury free and mercury safe, holistic dentist for over 30 years and is an innovator and leader in holistic dental wellness. For over 10 years he has researched mercury fillings and their effect on overall health. In addition to writing three popluar books on the subject, he runs the website Dentalwellness4u.com which is a vast resource of information on amalgam fillings, mercury toxicity and detoxification.
Videos of 2010 FDA Amalgam Hearing available for viewing A consumer activist, who attended the 2010 FDA hearings on amalgam safety, videotaped the event and has uploaded many important presentations from the hearings to the youtube channel, mercurymatters. Available videos include consumer safety organizations, scientists, mercury free dentists, injured consumers and dental staff.
Upcoming Documentary: Mercury Undercover Mercury Undercover exposes the cause and effect of the well-hidden evidence of mercury contamination as seen through the eyes of doctors,scientists, environmental experts and mercury-poisoned survivors. It is a gripping tale that will make you think twice before you eat your next catch-of-the-day or plan your next visit to the dentist’s office.In the course of this quest,we’ll hear from experts, doctors, scientists and mercury poisoning survivors.
UNEP publication: Mercury - A Priority For Action Mercury - A Priority For Action, a publication from The United Nations Environmental Program is intended to raise awareness amongst stakeholders of the effects of mercury on human health and the environment and on strategies to manage and control mercury. It is designed for the use of government officials and community leaders to provide information and raise awareness about mercury and the associated environment and health risks.
Understanding the ruling of Barnes v Kerr: Amalgam MSDS warnings also apply to mixed dental amalgam Dentist David Barnes, sued Kerr Corp., the largest manufacturer of dental amalgam in the United States, alleging that he had suffered a myriad of neurological injuries as a result of his occupational exposure to mercury. Dr. Barnes argued that Kerr's warnings were inadequate because they discussed only mercury, not mixed dental amalgam. Kerr argued that its warnings never represented that mercury was any less toxic when mixed.
Understanding Methyl Mercury and Mercury Vapor An essential argument in the anti-amalgam movement relates to the issue of human exposure to mercury vapor, a side-effect of "silver" dental amalgam fillings, which are actually 50% metallic mercury. The mercury vapor releaased is intensified by the number of fillings present and other activities associated with the human mouth, such as chewing, teeth-grinding and the consumption of hot liquids.
Toys made from amalgam Banned, but not dental fillings In this video Boyd Haley PhD tells a story about toys made from amalgam being banned by Canada, but not dental amalgam fillings.
The long awaited documentary Mercury Undercover is available now "Mercury Undercover" unveils the dirty truth about the dangers of mercury and how those people in power would love to "protect" you from the real truth. This compelling documentary brings light to a problem that affects more than you ever imagined. The director Elizabeth Hong and co-director Daniel Montoya are proud to announce the exclusive online release of the documentary.
The International Academy of Oral Medicine & Toxicology presentations to the FDA The International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology, a scientific organization made up of dental, medical and research professionals submitted a petition for reconsideration to the FDA in 2009. This petition pointed out the inaccuracies, inconsistencies and flawed science the FDA relied upon, and urged them to reconsidertheir ruling. The FDA convened a new dental products panel meeting in December 2010, to re-evaluate the issues brought up in the petition for reconsideration.
The Council of Europe calls for restricting or prohibiting the use of amalgams The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe adopted a resolution on 27 May 2011 urging its 47 member countries to start "restricting or prohibiting the use of amalgams as dental fillings."
The challenge of Dr. Herbert Needleman in the fight over lead toxicity "Dr. Herbert Needleman discovered that lead is harmful to the human body and mind in the 1950s. Since then, he has worked towards banning lead from everyday life in hope of stemming lead poisoning."
Testimony from DAMS President at FDA townhall in Orlando Bernard Windham of Dental Amalgam Mercury Solutions gives his testimony at the Orlando townhall hosted by the FDA's Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH) which is responsible for classifying and regulating dental mercury amalgam fillings.
Tampa Dentist Sings The Amalgam Blues Tampa Dentist, Dr. Hal Enlow, sings an original composition titled "The Amalgam Blues." The harmful effects of mercury toxicity are well documented and could play a role in the development of diseases that have come to be viewed by the medical community as chronic conditions for which there are no known causes. Listen, enjoy, and then do something about your dangerous amalgam fillings.
Sweden recommends banning mercury fillings for health and environmental reasons FDA's Director of the center for devices and radiological health (CDRH) knew Sweden banned mercury fillings for health reasons yet misrepresented those findings and chose not to update their fact sheet on dental amalgam which stated the opposite
Sweden did NOT get rid of mercury fillings solely for environmental reasons In a July 11th broadcast of BBC Panorama, Tom Mangold interviews Siw Persson, a member of the Swedish parliament. Tom learns that Sweden did NOT get rid of mercury fillings solely for environmental reasons as many pro-mercury filling advocates claim.
Susan Runner of the FDA's CDRH explains how mercury fillings are safe for children Susan Runner of the FDA's Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH) explains how mercury exposure from dental amalgam fillings (which release various amounts of mercury 24/7 ) is safe for children.
Scientists urge FDA to stop mercury amalgam filling use in children, pregnant women, and hypersensitive At the end of the FDA dental products panel hearing to evaluate the safety of amalgam, FDA’s scientific panel, including neurologists, toxicologists, epidemiologists, and environmental health specialists concluded that, contrary to the claims of FDA’s in-house dentist Susan Runner, "amalgam is not safe for everybody." and to stop its use in susceptible, at risk populations.
Report to the IAOMT on the Congressional Hearing “Assessing State and Local Regulations to Reduce Dental Mercury Emissions” The International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology hired John Rowe of Capitol Strategy Consultants, Inc. to give a rundown of the proceedings from the hearing, "Assessing State and Local Regulations to Reduce Dental Mercury Emissions" which was conducted on Tuesday, July 8, 2008 in room 2154 Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, D.C. 20515
Overview of The US Dental Amalgam Debate, 2010 Meeting of the FDA Dental Products Panel The current scientific debate regarding the safety of amalgam dental restorations being conducted in the US is presented. The material is based on a meeting held on December 14 and 15, 2010 by the Dental Products Panel of the Medical Devices Advisory Committee of the Food and Drug Administration. The scientific and historic context of the debate is provided, followed by scientific arguments, public testimony and panel deliberations.
Overview of the Government Accountability Office This video provides an overview of The Government Accountability Office (GAO) goals and operations, including the agency's responsibilities, core values, organizational structure, engagement process, and accomplishments. When GAO has investigated the government agencies which regulate various aspects of dental amalgam they have found mismanagement, fraud, and a suppression of science.
Norway Bans Mercury Amalgam Fillings The Norwegian Minister of the Environment and International Development, Erik Solheim, has prohibited the use of mercury in products in Norway. Among others the use of mercury in dental materials will be prohibited.
NGO, IAOMT Story has gone viral within the medical community The NGO, IAOMT urging the UN to ban mercury fillings story has gone viral within the medical community.
Newly placed high copper amalgam fillings release 189% more mercury than non-high copper amalgams James Adams PhD presents data that proves high copper amalgam fillings release up to 189 % more mercury than non-high copper amalgams during the first few days of placement.
New publisher, Capsule Press is all about mercury I've had a pretty great year. In May, my first book, Getting the Mercury Out, was published. It's a memoir about my mercury poisoning experience, how I was poisoned by my amalgam fillings, and how I detoxed the mercury and made a full recovery. This book is very close to my heart, not only because it's the story of my own personal struggle, but because I'm also its publisher!
Neurotoxic Effects of Mercury in Norwegian Dental Nurses Presented to FDA in 2006 In 2006, Michael Bender, director of Mercury Policy Project testified in front of the FDA's dental product panel. Michael explained in great detail how thousands of Norwegian dental nurses had suffered neurotoxic effects from occupational exposure to mercury vapor. Other adverse health effects included: tremors, memory and concentration problems, liver and kidney problems, depression, extreme fatigue, anxiety, mood swings, vision disturbances, diarrhea, menstrual and muscular problems.
National Coverage on NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams National Coverage of the Dental Amalgam Issue on NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams on December 10th, 2010.
Movies That Matter Presents "SMOKING TEETH = POISON GAS" Next up in the "Movies That Matter" series at Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Door County is the film "Smoking Teeth = Poison Gas." which will play at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday (02-15-2011) at Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 10341 Wisconsin 42, Ephraim. For more information, call (920) 854-7559 or go to www.uufdc.org
Minnesota Bans Mercury In Cosmetic Products What? Mercury in cosmetics banned ? Wow, those levels of mercury must be astronimically high to ban it in a product that is occasionally used by a small percentage of the population. What? the amount found in cosmetics is only a miniscule fraction of what is released from dental mercury amalgam fillings continually for the life of the amalgam, which can sometimes be upward of 60+ years. Go figure.
Mike Fleming DDS discusses the History of FDA's Classification of Dental Amalgam Fillings Mike DDS, Discusses the History of FDA's Classification of Dental Amalgam Fillings. Dr. Michael D. Fleming currently serves as the Consumer Representative on the Dental Products Panel at the Center for Devices and Radiologic Health of the Food and Drug Administration and has served on two separate hearings on the safety of dental amalgam in 2006 and 2010.
Mercury vapor poisoning aboard HMS Triumph and HMS Phipps In 1810, two British ships, HMS Triumph and HMS Phipps, salvaged a large load of elemental mercury from a wrecked Spanish vessel near Cadiz, Spain. The bladders containing the mercury soon ruptured. The element spread about the ships in liquid and vapor forms. The sailors presented with neurologic compromises: tremor, paralysis, and excessive salivation as well as tooth loss, skin problems, and pulmonary complaints.
Mercury Fillings A Health Threat? Maestro Ben Zander, conductor for the Boston Philharmonic, speaks publicly about his complete recovery from Ménière's Disease after having his fifteen mercury amalgam fillings removed. The neurological disease, Ben says nearly cost him his career.
Listen to Consumer Advocates Interviewed on The Edge In an informative interview by Tom Smith, host and producer of the radio program THE EDGE, consumer advocate Freya Koss and attorney James Love discuss the health hazards of mercury amalgam dental fillings and the history of FDA's illogical refusal to remove this toxic product from the marketplace. 
Jim Love of the IAOMT: dental industry influence on Health Canada's amalgam risk assessment Jim Love of the IAOMT discusses the dental industries influence on Health Canada's dental amalgam risk assessment authored by Mark Richardson.
James Hardy DMD presents his testimony to the FDA's CDRH Townhall in Orlando March 2011 Dentist Dr. James Hardy DMD is author of the book, Mercury Free: The wisdom behind the global consumer movement to ban "silver" dental fillings. For 30 years he has had a mercury free dental practice. In this video he presents his testimony to the FDA's CDRH Townhall in Orlando March 2011
Is there more mercury in a tuna sandwich compared to mercury dental fillings ? One argument pro-amalgamist use when trying to downplay the exposure to mercury from dental amalgam fillings is to say that there is more mercury exposure from a tuna fish sandwich compared to that from dental mercury fillings. So we decided to examine the merits of that argument by comparing mercury levels from a 5 oz. can of tuna to the many various exposure levels from that of dental amalgam on different age groups through out the U.S.A.
Institute of Medicine Panel says FDA's medical device review system 'flawed' The government should abandon a 35-year-old system for approving most medical devices in the U.S. because it offers little to no assurance of safety for patients, a panel of medical experts concludes in a report Friday. The surprise recommendation from the Institute of Medicine panel calls for a massive reworking of how the government regulates medical devices. Dental Amalgam Fillings are considered a medical device.
Injured Consumer Freya Koss Testifies at the FDA Townhall in Orlando Freya Koss, director of the Pennsylvania Coalition For Mercury Free Dentistry delivers her testimony to the FDA's Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH) in Orlando Florida.
Government Accountability Office - GAO GAO is known as "the investigative arm of Congress" and "the congressional watchdog." GAO supports the Congress in meeting its constitutional responsibilities and helps improve the performance and accountability of the federal government for the benefit of the American people. When GAO has investigated the government agencies which regulate various aspects of dental amalgam they have found mismanagement, fraud, and a suppression of science.
Glass-Ionomer Cement: A cost-effective, mercury-free, aesthetic tooth restoration. The latest systematic review results suggest high-viscosity glass-ionomer cement (GIC) as a safe and economical long-term tooth restorative. 
French dentists move away from mercury fillings Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Germany have banned or restricted use of the fillings. The European commission may soon call for their phasing out.
Fox news reporter Stacy Case presents a powerful testimonial of her mercury induced MS to the FDA Fox news reporter, Stacy Case, delivers an emotional testimony at the FDA's townhall in California, September 2011. She tells of her mercury induced MS symptoms and diagnosis. The townhall, hosted by The FDA's Center's for devices and radiological health, the office within FDA that has failed to classify mercury fillings for over 33 years, despite researchers presenting scientific evidence of harm from a medical device made of 50% mercury.
Floridians tell Dr. Shuren of the FDA's CDRH - BAN MERCURY AMALGAM NOW! When FDA's Center for Devices showed up in Orlando for the public Town Hall Meeting on May 5th, an impressive group of professionals and consumers confronted Director, Dr. Jeffrey Shuren, the apologist for the abysmal Amalgam Rule. Floridians turned out en masse outraged over FDA's failure to protect even children from dental mercury.
FDA widens mercury skin lightening cream investigation Mercury, a known toxin, is banned in skin-bleaching or lightening creams. Mercury is sometimes illegally added to creams because the metal blocks production of melanin, which gives skin its pigmentation. Mercury is rapidly absorbed through the skin and can cause severe health effects, including neurological and kidney damage.
FDA loses lawsuit and must classify dental amalgam mercury fillings In 1976, Congress directed FDA to classify (determine the risk of) every medical device. Dental fillings are a medical device. FDA proceeded to classify all filling materials except the most common one – and the most controversial one – mercury amalgam fillings. Despite letters, petitions, Congressional hearings, and a lawsuit, FDA refused to budge. For 32 years, from 1976 to 2008, FDA defied the law, until Consumers for Dental Choice sued them.
FDA gets an earful about dental amalgam at town hall meeting The FDA held a town hall meeting in Las Colinas Texas. Several people confronted the director about dental mercury fillings.  "I was sick for 20 years before a doctor found out what was wrong with me," said Virginia Pritchett, who has been plagued by seizures and immune system problems caused by a reaction to dental mercury. "The fact that they have not banned these is nothing short of an atrocity to humanity."  
FDA condemns itself to perpetual study and inaction, leaving the public unprotected The FDA was charged with evaluating and classifying medical devices in 1976. Amalgam manufacturers have been able to successfully shirk the burden of proving safety, which should rightfully be assigned to them. If the FDA assigns the burden to prove harm to U.S. consumer groups, the FDA condemns itself to perpetual study and inaction. This will result in an ineffective agency and an unprotected public, devastated by preventable degenerative disease.
Excerpts From Health Canada's Dental Amalgam Risk Assessment The Health Canada report entitled "Assessment of Mercury Exposure and Risks from Dental Amalgam" was prepared for the Medical Devices Bureau by Dr. Mark Richardson and released in November, 1995. It was the first comprehensive risk assessment in Canada of mercury exposure from dental amalgam.
EPA Warns of High Mercury Levels in Skin-Lightening Creams The EPA is warning against skin-lightening creams that may contain dangerous levels of mercury. The Chicago Tribune sent 50 creams to a certified lab for testing. Six of the creams were found to contain amounts of mercury banned by federal law. Five had more than 6,000 parts per million of mercury: Amalgam fillings contain 500,000 parts per million of mercury.
Dr. Rich Chanin DMD Discusses Biological Dentistry and Patients Health Improvements After Removing Amalgam Fillings Dr. Rich Chanin DMD discusses patients health improvements he has observed after removing amalgam fillings from their mouths.
Dr. Neufeld shares stories of patients improved health after removal of mercury fillings My journey toward becoming a holistic and mercury free dentist began around 2002. I had already stopped using silver amalgam fillings in the 1990's, when better filling options became available. I was concerned about the idea of putting mercury in people's mouths and also knew that it caused teeth to crack, which is not what I wanted for my patients.
Dr. Joeseph Baba DDS Patients Health Improvements After Removing Amalgam Fillings Dr. Joeseph Baba D.D.S. discusses patients health improvements he has observed after removing amalgam fillings from their mouths.
Dr. James Rota gives a brief history on the use of mercury in amalgam fillings in American dentistry Dr. James Rota gives a brief history on the use of mercury in amalgam fillings in American dentistry  
Dr Michael Margolis presents evidence that mercury from amalgam fillings is absorbed into the gum and jaw bone Dr Michael Margolis presents evidence to the FDA's dental products panel in 2010 that mercury from amalgam fillings is absorbed into the gum and jaw bone
Documentary Filmmaker Kelly G. releases 2 new short films on dental mercury. Five time cancer survivor Kelly G. (Pandora’s Mouth) has made two great, short and easy to grasp movies about the mercury issue / heavy metal toxicity from dental amalgam. Please watch them and feel free to circulate them within your respective network(s).
Diane Meyer: It was mercury poisoning, not my hormones I'm Dr. Diane Meyer a practicing dentist in the SW suburbs of Chicago.  I've been in the dental field for over 30 years. I am a female dentist that has had to deal with a lot of medical issues, that were passed off as being either hormonal or psychological. My medical issues can be traced directly to the enormous amounts of occupational mercury I was exposed to. Mercury exposure is an entirely overlooked health hazard in my profession, which is why I decided to write this article.
Debunking the ADA's claim of "only minute amounts of mercury are released from amalgam" When reporting on how much mercury is released from dental mercury amalgam fillings most journalists cite The American Dental Association's spokesman Rodney Mackert's "estimates" without understanding any of the inherant flaws in his methodology.  Read on to find out more about the debunking of this dubious claim.  
Daubert: The Most Influential Supreme Court Ruling You’ve Never Heard Of The US Supreme Court ruled in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. that judges must act as "gatekeepers" in the courtroom, determining if the scientific evidence introduced is relevant and reliable. The Daubert decision has had tremedous impact on how science is used (and misused) in courts. In his dissent in the Daubert case, Chief Justice William Rehnquist raised concern that Daubert would force judges, many of whom have little knowledge of science, to become "amateur scientists."
Correcting the inaccurate "Red Herring" comment from FDA amalgam hearing panelist Susan Griffin of the EPA When covering the 2010 FDA dental products panel hearing on the safety of dental amalgam fillings, the press widely promoted the "red herring" comment from FDA panelist, Susan Griffin (of the EPA). The comment was directed at the assertion that the Fawer study should not be relied on for the basis of a risk assessment because many of the workers in the study were also exposed to chlorine, which inhibits uptake of mercury (up to 40%).
Congressman Burton Holds 2nd Amalgam Hearing ADA Spokesman's Testimony Discredited by Scientists Richard D. Fischer, DDS gives a summary of the hearing convened Thursday, May 8, 2003 by The House Subcommittee on Human Rights and Wellness, chaired by Congressman Dan Burton. The hearing was titled, "Consumer choice and implementing full disclosure in dentistry".
Civil War Surgeon General was court-martialed for ordering end to mercury Realizing that mercury should have no role in medicine, Surgeon General of the United States, William A. Hammond courageously issued General Order #6, banning its use by Army physicians. Immediately thereafter, The American Medical Association called for his ouster and assigned delegates from every state to work against Order #6, thus leading to his eventual court-martial.
Chris Shade PhD shares the history of lead and declining levels determining harm. Chris Shade PhD shares the history of lead and declining levels determining harm. Accompanying article, A Brief History of Lead Regulation" by Tristan Fowler.
Chicago Tribune’s Trine Tsouderos Undermines dietary supplement OSR a Powerful Antioxidant Dr. Stephen C. L'Hommedieu critiques the flawed Chicago Tribune article OSR#1: Industrial Chemical or Autism Treatment?  In the article, Medical and Science reporter Trine Tsouderos provides outright misinformation. Trine is an excellent example of today's biased 'journalism.' It is junk food journalism guaranteed to tantalize the nerve buds within the minds of the uninformed and those who lack analytical thinking.
Charlie Brown of Consumers for Dental Choice interviewed on California Public Radio Charlie Brown, Executive Director of Consumers for Dental Choice and Dr. Edmond Hewlett, Professor in the Division of Restorative Dentistry at the UCLA School of Dentistry and Consumer Advisor for the American Dental Association are interviewed on the Southern California Public Radio program Air Talk.
Charlie Brown of Consumers for Dental Choice explains the history of FDAs classification of dental mercury fillings In 1976, Congress directed FDA to classify (determine the risk of) every medical device. Dental fillings are a medical device. FDA proceeded to classify all filling materials except the most common one – and the most controversial one – mercury amalgam fillings. Despite letters, petitions, Congressional hearings, and a lawsuit, FDA refused to budge. FDA had no intention of doing what by law it was required to do. For 32 years, FDA defied the law.
CBS Evening News - FDA Weighs Mercury Use in Tooth Fillings CBS NEWS: FDA Weighs Mercury Use in Tooth Fillings
Panel Examines Whether Fillings Dentists Use 50 Million Times Annually Have Adverse Effects
CBS:  Many people have silver fillings in their teeth called amalgams. Dentists put in more than 50 million of them annually.  The Food and Drug Administration looked Tuesday at whether they may be hazardous
Causes of Dental Mercury Amalgam Failure In this educational video one will learn about the many ways in which amalgam fillings can and do fail. In addition, Dr. Harold Loe, the Director of the National Institute of Dental Research ( NIDR), explains why amalgam is not an ideal dental filling.
Book Review: Toxic Dentistry Exposed Graeme Munro-Hall, BDS, and Lillian Munro-Hall, BDS, wrote “Toxic Dentistry Exposed: The Link between Dentistry and Chronic Disease". Graeme and Lillian explain the need for holistic dentistry, the link of oral health and systemic health problems, and provide excellent case studies.
Book Review: The Toxic Dental Office - How to protect yourself and your family A new patient comes into your dental practice. How do you explain the thousands of issues about a biological dental practice in the allotted time? Simply put you can’t! You can only explain a few methods and procedures that may directly relate to the patient’s initial complaint. It is a steep learning curve for patients.
Book Review: The Poison in Your Teeth: Mercury Amalgam (Silver) Fillings… Book Review: The Poison in Your Teeth: Mercury Amalgam (Silver) Fillings…. Hazardous to Your Health
Author: Tom McGuire, DDS Review by: Marjorie Theroux Tietjen  
Book Review: Beating Alzheimer's A Step Towards Unlocking the Mysteries of Brain Diseases by Tom Warren  Tom details the remarkable personal story of how he reversed the devastating symptoms of Alzheimer's disease in this book, "Beating Alzheimer's - A Step towards Unlocking the Mysteries of Brain Diseases". Through extensive reading, Tom was able to find the science that led to his recovery and outlines the step-by-step plan that he followed to free himself from the grips of this relentless disease.
Book Review: Amalgam Illness: Diagnosis and Treatment, by Andrew H Cutler While there are many books available about detoxing from mercury, "Amalgam Illness, Diagnosis and Treatment: What You Can Do to Get Better, How Your Doctor Can Help" is highly praised and regarded as one of the safest, most effective protocols used for detoxing from mercury. Read on to learn more about this book from the author and publisher.
BBC Panorama The Poison in Your Mouth Most people have metal or amalgam fillings in their mouth and each filling is made from 50% mercury. Science has shown that everytime we chew, brush, or grind our teeth, some of the mercury is released as a vapor and we inhale it. Panorama has uncovered a growing body of scientific evidence which shows ominous links between the mercury from our fillings and serious illnesses. We also reveal an uncomfortable background of complacency and ignorance within the British Dental establishment which is helping mask the truth about the dangers of the poison in your mouth.
Backstory to the FDA 2010 hearings on the safety of dental mercury amalgam fillings The International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology presents the backstory and lead up to the 2010 FDA hearing on amalgam safety.
Atraumatic Restorative Treatment (ART) An inexpensive, safe, effective alternative to amalgam Dr Prathip Phantumvanit from Thailand is a founder of Atraumatic Restorative Treatment (ART) which is an inexpensive, safe and effective alternative to mercury amalgam dental fillings.
American Dental Association owes no legal duty of care to protect the public from allegedly dangerous products used by dentists "The ADA owes no legal duty of care to protect the public from allegedly dangerous products used by dentists... ...The ADA's only alleged involvement in the product was to provide information regarding its use. Dissemination of information relating to the practice of dentistry does not create a duty of care to protect the public from potential injury".
Amalgam Debate: Distorted Science Robert Cartland, an Engineering Physicist from Southern California, examines two widely touted statements, one from each side of the amalgam debate, that have more rhetorical than scientific value. The first is the IAOMT claim that mercury is the most toxic nonradioactive element on the periodic table. The second is the ADA claim that amalgam is safe because it binds mercury in a way similar to the molecules in table salt. Both statements are misleading and distort the science.
ADA promotes chewing gum which increases mercury vapor released from silver mercury fillings by 15% In 2007 the ADA started awarding their ADA Seal of Acceptance to chewing gum manufacturers. Unfortunately there was no warnings that chewing gum can increase release of mercury vapor from "silver" mercury fillings as noted in the 1981 landmark study by Dr. Carl Svare, found that mercury release from fillings increases by 15-fold whenever the fillings are stimulated by chewing, brushing, hot fluids and bruxism.
ABC NEWS - FDA Panel Reviews Health Safety of Mercury Fillings Opponents of Dental Mercury Want Restrictions, If Not Ban
A federal advisory panel is trying to decide whether the U.S. Food and Drug Administration relied on adequate science when it determined last year that mercury amalgam can safely be used to fill cavities in healthy people.The FDA didn't find evidence that dental mercury hurts developing fetuses, young children and those sensitive to its potential health effects.
A series of funny cartoons on dental mercury fillings Here is a collection of funny cartoons on dental mercury fillings we found on the internet, enjoy.  Please, feel free to submit more if you find any.
A Critical Analysis of the Science Underestimating Mercury Released from Amalgam Fillings Many dental journals frame the conversation of mercury released from amalgam fillings as a “controversy”. They continually underestimate the emission of Hg from amalgam in order to downplay any potential for adverse effects. This article compares the methodologies between research by Dr. Boyd Haley indicating amalgam releases large amounts of Hg over time and another researcher, who is funded by the dental materials industry.
A Brief Overview of the Petition For Reconsideration For over 33 years the FDA dodged properly classifying dental mercury amalgam as it was grandfathered in without proof of safety. In 2007 the FDA lost a lawsuit which forced them to classify. The final FDA classification declared mercury amalgam to be safe for anyone and everyone, without regard to age, reproductive status, or any of the known factors that make a person susceptible to the effects of mercury exposure.
A Brief History of Dental Amalgam In testimony to the FDA's dental products panel in December 2010, David Kennedy DDS gives a brief overview of the history of dental amalgam and debunks popular pro-mercury arguments.
A Brief History of Alzheimer's Disease Boyd Haley P.h.D. gives a brief overview of the history of Alzheimer's disease and how the increased use in amalgam coincides with the rise in Alzheimer's disease.
2010 Assessing EPA's Efforts to Measure and Reduce Mercury Pollution from Dentist Offices May 26, 2010, the Domestic Policy Subcommittee held a hearing entitled "Assessing EPA's Efforts to Measure and Reduce Mercury Pollution from Dentist Offices." The purpose of the hearing is to examine actions undertaken by EPA and other stakeholders to improve measurement of and limit mercury pollution from dental sources.
2008 Reducing Dental Mercury Emissions:Installing Amalgam Separators and Achieving Compliance The Subcommittee on Domestic Policy held a hearing entitled "Reducing Dental Mercury Emissions Installing Amalgam Separators and Achieving Compliance." The hearing examined existing state and local government initiatives and regulations aimed at reducing dental mercury emissions, evaluated their success, and documented the lessons learned. 
2008 Assessing State and Local Regulations to Reduce Dental Mercury Emissions July 8, 2008, the Subcommittee on Domestic Policy held a hearing entitled "Assessing State and Local Regulations to Reduce Dental Mercury Emissions." This hearing examined existing state and local government initiatives and regulations aimed at reducing dental mercury emissions, evaluated their success, and documented the lessons learned.
2007 Environmental Risks of and Regulatory Response to Mercury Dental Fillings November 14, 2007, the Subcommittee on Domestic Policy held a hearing entitled "Environmental Risks of and Regulatory Response to Mercury Dental Fillings." The purpose of the hearing is to examine actions undertaken by EPA and other stakeholders to improve measurement of and limit mercury pollution from dental sources.
2004 Truth Revealed: New Scientific Discoveries Regarding Mercury in Medicine and Autism September 8 2004, the Subcommittee on Human Rights and Wellness of the Committee on Government Reform held a hearing entitled "Truth Revealed: New Scientific Discoveries Regarding Mercury in Medicine and Autism."
2004 California's Compliance with Dental Amalgam Disclosure Policies January 26 2004, the Subcommittee on Human Rights and Wellness of the Committee on Government Reform held a hearing entitled "California's Compliance with Dental Amalgam Disclosure Policies."
2003 The Environmental Impact of Mercury Containing Dental Amalgams October 8, 2003, the Subcommittee on Human Rights and Wellness of the Committee on Government Reform held a hearing entitled "The Environmental Impact of Mercury Containing Dental Amalgams."
2003 Consumer Choice and Implementing Full Disclosure in Dentistry May 8, 2003, the Subcommittee on Human Rights and Wellness of the Committee on Government Reform held a hearing entitled "Consumer Choice and Implementing Full Disclosure in Dentistry."
2002 Mercury in dental amalgams: An examination of the science November 14, 2002, the Committee on Government Reform held a hearing entitled "Mercury in dental amalgams: An examination of the science."
"Silver" Amalgam Fillings Containing Mercury Are Still Commonly Used Among Young US Dentists Despite improvements in resin-based composite technology, US dentists are placing more amalgam restorations than composites, and amalgam is still emphasized by US dental schools, according to the results of 2 studies published in the June issue of the Journal of the American Dental Association.
"NoBody needs mercury!" - our mutual slogan and logo!? One of my goals for 2011 is that we join forces as to marketing, branding and thus create a unified front by ... next to our existing logos/names ... incorporating and promoting the “Nobody needs mercury!” slogan respectively product range in order to … in an easy to grasp way … heighten the awareness about the mercury issue and the acceptance of the diagnosis heavy metal toxicity:
"Doubt Is Their Product" outlines how industry uses junk science to manufacture doubt and controversy "Doubt is our product," a cigarette executive once observed, "since it is the best means of competing with the 'body of fact' that exists in the minds of the general public. It is also the means of establishing a controversy." This book gives great insight into how trade organizations like the American Dental Association can use junk science to manufacture doubt and controversy.

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Wednesday, 14 September 2011 00:12

BBC Panorama The Poison in Your Mouth

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BBC Panorama:The Poison in Your Mouth
July 11, 1994

- Hard to believe that after such a thorough investigiation of the facts that amalgam dentistry still exists.


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BBC Panorama:
The Poison in Your Mouth
July 11, 1994.


TOM MANGOLD (BBC): This is a phial of mercury, a liquid metal and one of the most poisonous substances known to man. Most people have metal or amalgam fillings in their mouth and half the metal in each filling is made from this stuff. For years dentists have believed that these fillings were safe, but now we know that everytime we chew, brush, or grind our teeth, some of the mercury is released as a vapor and we inhale it.

Panorama has uncovered a growing body of scientific evidence which shows ominous links between the mercury from our fillings and serious illnesses. We also reveal an uncomfortable background of complacency and ignorance within the British Dental establishment and apathy in government which is helping mask the truth about the dangers of the poison in your mouth.

(Vision shows men wearing protective suits)

These men are handling old amalgam tooth fillings for recycling. Once removed, what had lived inside our mouths for years is suddenly treated as the dangerous poison it's always been. Mercury is so toxic that at certain levels it drives people mad. But even the tiniest amounts are regarded as unsafe.

At lower levels - no one quite knows how low they are - the metal attacks the brain and the central nervous system producing symptoms which include nervousness and irritability, lack of concentration, loss of memory and self-confidence, mood swings, anxiety, depression, fatigue and insomnia.

Because there can be other causes for these symptoms, no one has associated dental amalgam with them. But suddenly the familiar quicksilver of our youth is beginning to look dirty.

(Vision cuts to interview extracts)

Dr. BOYD HALEY (University of Kentucky): If you have something that's been put in your mouth that you can't dispose of in a waste basket without breaking environmental protection laws, there's no point in keeping it around. There's no point in taking that type of risk. There's no point in exposing people to any level of mercury toxicity if you don't have to.

JOHN HUNT (Chief Executive, British Dental Association): The epidemiological evidence thus far and every other bit of evidence that we've seen, not just ourselves but the scientific experts and the toxicologists, points to amalgam as being as safe as any other material.

Dr. MURRAY VIMY (University of Calgary): Mercury is a poison; there's no safe level. The World Health Organization has determined that. And so how can we continue to implant that into people's teeth?

MANGOLD (BBC): Dentists have been using amalgam for over a century, convinced of its safety. The mercury is used to bond silver and other metals together to make a cheap, efficient, and durable filling. Yet no one has proved that when the mercury goes into our bodies that it is safe. The dentists have always assumed it was safe because there were no identifiable side effects. But dentists may not have been the right people to look for the subtle but dangerous symptoms of low level mercury poisoning. Supposing there have been side effects but of the kind that only doctors are qualified to recognize. Has the evidence always been there?

Tonight we examine the new scientific clues that place amalgam firmly in the dock, on suspicion of causing harm to humans. It's a case where both sides - believers and non-believers - are fundamentally divided on even the most basic issues.

Amalgam's most vehement support comes from the British Dental Association, the professional body to which most dentists belong. They run a service which includes giving their members an up to date advisory service. John Hunt is the Chief Executive and Peter Gordon the Scientific Advisor. They do no original work but review others' studies.

(Vision cuts to interview extract)

TOM MANGOLD (BBC): Is amalgam safe?

PETER GORDON (Science Adviser, BDA): In a word, yes.

MANGOLD (BBC): No doubt about that at all?

GORDON: No doubt about it at all.

MANGOLD (BBC): Is there anybody it's not safe for?

GORDON: There may be a small percentage of the population with an allergy to amalgam, but it really is very, very small. In fact, less than 50 worldwide in the last hundred years.

MANGOLD (BBC): So it must be 99.9% safe?

GORDON: Yes, in our opinion.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

VOICE OVER: Dr. Lars Friberg spoke recently at a German amalgam conference. He's the world's leading authority on mercury poisoning and was chief advisor to the World Health Organization on mercury safety. Until now he has remained studiously neutral in the mercury debate.

(Vision cuts to interview extract)

MANGOLD (BBC): Dr Friberg, is there a safe level of mercury?

Dr. LARS FRIBERG (Consultant, World Health Organization): No, there is no safe level of mercury. And no one has actually shown that there is a safe level of mercury. And, I would say, mercury is a very toxic substance.

MANGOLD (BBC): So there's no amount, in your opinion, that should really go into the body?

FRIBERG: I would like to avoid it as far as possible.

MANGOLD (BBC): If there is no safe level of mercury, why does the British Dental Association say there is one?

FRIBERG: I don't know but I think they are wrong.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

VOICE OVER: The first evidence of mercury's journey into the body, came ten years ago. Dentists had always assumed that mercury stayed inert in the filling. But scientists discovered that the gleaming new amalgam inside a polished tooth didn't stay put. It leaked as mercury vapor and entered the blood stream.

This is an electrical microscope picture of a ten year old amalgam filling. Those black holes are where the mercury used to be. In this filling, some 40 percent has evaporated in only ten years. But where did it go and could it cause harm to humans?

The challenge was taken up here in western Canada by two men from different disciplines. Their co-oporation has produced scientific revelations which are so damning that they may yet bring about the end of the very use of dental amalgam. Fritz Lorscheider and Murray Vimy set about clearing the smoke surrounding the amalgam mystery. Vimy, the academic dentist and World Health Organization consultant, and Lorscheider, Professor of Medical Physiology at the University of Calgary, pioneered a simple yet dramatic experiment to show not only where the missing mercury went but also that it did do harm when it got there. Their work shattered the comfortable illusion that mercury in amalgams was stable and safe. They took a sheep and put fillings in it's teeth containing radioactive mercury which would show up as black on X-rays.

(Vision cuts to footage of Dr Vimy looking at an x-ray)

Dr MURRAY VIMY: Here's the outline of the sheep, going all the way around, and this is the jawbone of the sheep. Here are the two stomachs. This area is the liver. And here are the two kidneys. And this is the transverse colon. So the mercury from the fillings, which was slightly radioactive, migrated to these tissues. In fact, it was in all the tissues. Now the dental profession said that well it's a sheep, it chews too much, they grind a lot, they regurgitate their food, it's not a good example.

VOICE OVER: So they repeated the work with monkeys and found again the mercury had spread. Furthermore, they discovered that even small amounts of mercury from amalgams damaged the kidneys of the sheep.

(Vision cuts to interview extract)

MANGOLD (BBC): When you look at all the current scientific evidence, what do you think it's trying to tell you?

VIMY: It tells me very succinctly that there is a chronic low dose exposure to a toxic heavy metal, that 80 to 85% of the industrialized world has this metal implanted in their teeth, and it's a situation of timed release poisoning.

(Vision cuts away from interview extract)

MANGOLD (BBC): But animal studies were one thing. What science now had to prove was that mercury from fillings in human beings was a major source of the body's intake of the metal, and that this mercury not only accumulated but stayed inside the body's most sensitive organs.

Well, they cracked that one here at the University of Arizona.

The University's Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology is headed by the world-renowned Professor Vasken Aposhian. He used these tablets to draw out mercury in the body's sensitive organs. Students volunteered to take part.

For over a century, dentists believed that mercury from fillings didn't even enter the body. But Aposhian's results published two years ago were an astonishing rebuttal. They showed that no less than two-thirds of the mercury in the body came from tooth fillings.

(Vision cuts to interview extract)

Dr. VASKEN APOSHIAN (University of Arizona): I'm worried that the amount of mercury coming from dental amalgams that we're putting in the mouths of young children today, might be harmful to them as far as affecting their learning abilities, their performance abilities, and I would hate to think that twenty years from now we will have hurt some of these children when we could have prevented it by proper scientific research and that is what we must do now.

VOICE OVER: The professor simply doesn't know if enough mercury from fillings enters the body to do harm, but nor is he waiting to find out.

APOSHIAN: I'd hate to see amalgams in the mouths of my grandchildren, who are 5 years and 8 years of age now, when there are better materials, and I think there are better materials, now available.

MANGOLD (BBC): And safer?

APOSHIAN: And safer.

(Vision cuts to BDA interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): Are you aware of the work of Professor Aposhian, professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology at the University of Arizona?

PETER GORDON (Science Advisor, British Dental Association): No.

MANGOLD (BBC): Not at all?

GORDON: (Shakes head)

MANGOLD (BBC): Did you know that he has shown that two-thirds of the mercury excreted from the human body comes from dental amalgams?

JOHN HUNT (Chief Executive, British Dental Association): No, I didn't know that.

MANGOLD (BBC): Isn't this, gentleman, a kind of document that ought to be on your desks?

HUNT: Yes, I'm surprised it isn't in the bundle that we have got, but nevertheless I think that if it were, and if you'd produced it, we would have had a look at it and asked our experts to have a look at it, and review the scientific methodology and the interpretation of the findings. We need to have a look at these papers and certainly, routinely, we do. This one we appeared to have missed.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): Now, even more ominous evidence has been uncovered. This time about the dangers of amalgam's mercury in the most vulnerable and sensitive organ of all.

It was a dentist in Los Angeles who first discovered from his examination of bodies here in the mortuary that mercury from dental amalgam travels to the brain, and the more fillings the more it accumulates.

Dr. David Eggleston is a dentist in California. His clients include Tom Cruise. His less glamorous work recently took him to the county morgue to investigate the relationship between dental mercury and the brains of the dead. Eggleston spent months studying the records and discovered that mercury from amalgams not only accumulates in the brain, but that some of this poison stays in the skull for as long as 40 years.

(Vision cuts to new interview extract)

Dr. DAVID EGGLESTON (University of Southern California): I think there is legitimate concern regarding the mercury issue in dentistry. Mercury does release from the silver fillings, it does accumulate in the body.

MANGOLD (BBC): Do you insert mercury amalgam in this practice here?

EGGLESTON: No, I do not.

MANGOLD (BBC): For the reasons you've just given?

EGGLESTON: Yes for the mercury issue, yes.

MANGOLD (BBC): And have you had your fillings, your amalgam fillings removed?

EGGLESTON: Yes, I have.

MANGOLD (BBC): Again, for the same reason?

EGGLESTON: For concern with mercury yes.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): So if dental mercury enters and stays in the brain for most of our lives then what evidence is there that it produces long term damage?

Testing humans for mercury damage over a lifetime would be a notoriously difficult and expensive study. No one's ever tried it. But suddenly researchers are on the verge of a breakthrough.

These are the dental records of scores of elderly nuns in a convent in Wisconsin. They may hide part of the answer to one of amalgam's greatest riddles - is there a link between the mercury in fillings and the deadly disease of alzheimers? A unique study starting with these files may provide the clues.

These spritely ladies have made it into a fulfilling old age. They've agreed to take part in a scientific gamble by donating their brains to medical researchers who will look for a positive relationship between dental amalgams and alzheimers disease.

Already some scientists are reaching provisional conclusions about the dangers of dental amalgams.

(Vision cuts to new interview extract)

MANGOLD (BBC): Is there any doubt in your mind about the association between mercury and alzheimers?

Dr. BOYD HALEY (University of Kentucky): I would not want to make a statement that mercury causes alzheimers disease but there is no doubt in my mind that low levels of mercury, present in the brain, could cause neuronal cell death and this could lead to dementia, which would be similar to alzheimers disease.

VOICE OVER: Dr Boyd Haley, professor of medicinal and biochemistry, has just made a dramatic breakthrough while investigating the implication of dental amalgam with alzheimers. He has discovered that even tiny quantities of the metal can produce changes in the brain that are identical to changes caused by the disease. Specifically the mercury inhibits the efficiency of tubulin, a protein essential to brain cells.

HALEY: We can't go inside a living human being and look at their brains so we have to work outside and do scientific experiments such as we've done. And through the best that we can determine with these experiments, mercury is a time-bomb in the brain waiting to have an effect. If it's not bothering someone when they're young, especially when they age it could turn into something quite disastrous.

MANGOLD (BBC): So, in a worst case scenario, what happens to the human being?

HALEY: You would become demented.

VOICE OVER: Although Dr. Haley knows there is still no proof of damage, he for one has heard enough.

MANGOLD (BBC): What did you do about your own fillings?

HALEY: I still have one amalgam filling. But, when I have them replaced, I have them replaced with non-amalgam material.

MANGOLD (BBC): Why?

HALEY: Because I'm afraid enough of my own research, and concerned enough, that I don't want it in my mouth, nor do I want it in the mouth of my children, or my wife.

(Vision cuts to BDA interview extract)

MANGOLD (BBC): Are you aware of the association between dental mercury and alzheimers?

PETER GORDON (Science Advisor, British Dental Association): As far as I know, there is no association with mercury and alzheimers.

MANGOLD (BBC): Are you aware of a paper by Dr. Boyd Haley of the University of Kentucky?

GORDON: By name, no.

MANGOLD (BBC): Gentleman, this was published in 1993. Isn't this a document that should be on your desk?

JOHN HUNT (Chief Executive, British Dental Association): I come back to the point that we rely on expert advice.

MANGOLD (BBC): But, what kind of advice are you getting if these papers are not being put on your desk so that you can inform your dentists and members of the public?

HUNT: Well, we look to a group of people, including our consultants, but also we rely upon the Department of Health and other bodies to let us have their results and their advice about results that they would have read in papers.

MANGOLD (BBC): These are key papers Mr Hunt. These are very important papers, aren't they? I mean the relationship between dental mercury and alzheimers is not an unserious matter.

HUNT: No, and we shall certainly look at that paper.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

VOICE OVER: The few dentists who have read the new data now refuse to handle amalgam at all. The majority who do are warned by their dental associations to deal with it with considerable caution and respect. Some even treat it like a journey to a hostile planet. But given their occupational exposure to dental amalgam, they are taking sensible precaution.

But are all these precautions enough to protect the dentists and their assistants from the mercury vapor that they'll encounter in the workplace?

One long established and apparent fact has always consoled dentists who work with amalgam. If it doesn't hurt us, they argue, how could it harm you the patient?

But in a dramatic new study to be published shortly, even that comforting truth is now revealed as yet another illusion.

A dentist is tested for his speed of action and reaction as part of a complex assessment of his central nervous system. Dr Diane Echeverria, a neurotoxicologist, has just completed a remarkable study. She tested American dentists to see whether they have the subtle, but dangerous, symptoms of mercury poisoning.

(Vision cuts to interview)

Dr. DIANA ECHEVERRIA (University of Washington): Well the kinds of things that we have found are losses in function associated with the ability to move manually very small things with your hands. A manual dexterity problem. Other kinds of really distinct functions are concentration, the inability to concentrate. Actually those are skills that anybody needs.

(Vision cuts to other interview)

Dr. VASKEN APOSHIAN (University of Arizona): If I were to time how fast you could put this pen into these holes, or similar tasks, that in normal people might take one second to find the right hole and very quickly make the connections, a person with a deficit would take more time, maybe 2 or maybe even 5 seconds. And so, in the studies that Diana did, she was measuring in milliseconds which is an even more careful approximation of the times.

MANGOLD (BBC): What are the implications?

APOSHIAN: The implications are that in the dental technicians the mercury has caused very definite central nervous system disorders.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

VOICE OVER: No one has ever tested human beings who have such a low level of mercury before. Dentists will be alarmed to learn that some of their physical functions and emotions are already being injured by exposure to such small levels of mercury vapor. It's only a question of time and research funds before similar tests are conducted on patients.

And to add to the discomforting news, the difference in body mercury levels between dentists and patients is already too close for comfort.

(Vision cuts to interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): Doctor, is there an overlap between the lowest figure of exposure for dentists and the highest figure for ordinary patients with quite a lot of amalgam fillings?

ECHEVERRIA: Probably yes.

MANGOLD (BBC): And does that mean then that a lot of patients are probably suffering the same symptoms that the dentists are suffering?

ECHEVERRIA: Well that's the next research question that we need to ask ourselves, because we don't know for sure. We have indications that comparable effects are appearing just above that range. But the leading question now is whether or not we have a problem at that lower overlap level.

MANGOLD (BBC): But that means at that level the safety margin is extremely small.

ECHEVERRIA: Very narrow. Extremely narrow. That's a major concern. That's right.

(Vision cuts to other interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): Just tell me this because people will say 'ok that's bad, it takes a microsecond longer to put a pen into a hole,' does it matter?

APOSHIAN: My greatest worry would be among the children. Now children are going to school. They are being taught things. They are being taught how to handle living situations, everyday situations. They're being given information that we hope they'll keep in their minds for a better way of life. It is conceivable that as they are being educated, and as they are being trained to do something, that their training will not stay with them as long, that they may not be able to do things as quickly, and therefore they will not be able to be judged proficient in certain tasks.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): If you write to the British Dental Association here on Wimpole Street asking about the safety of amalgam fillings, they'll send you a so-called fact sheet. This is it. It covers the subject of children by stating categorically that the evidence available to the BDA doesn't justify banning the use of amalgam in young children. Yet it is precisely the young who are most vulnerable to mercury poisoning.

These children at a Liverpool comprehensive have on average a couple of fillings each. It's easy to demonstrate how the mercury vapors escapes from their small fillings. We invited an expert to bring a mercury vapor tester to check. The air around the fillings is measured.

Even without stimulation some mercury vapor is escaping from the filling. Then the filling is rubbed to simulate chewing, brushing or grinding. This time there is no doubt that mercury vapor has begun to leak copiously. This is the actual reading as the needle goes off the scale.

(Vision cuts to schoolroom)

MANGOLD (BBC): She's only got one filling hasn't she?

TESTER: Right.

MANGOLD (BBC): And if she has eight fillings.

TESTER: It'd be eight times as much.

VOICE OVER: The United States authorities recommend a maximum safe mercury exposure limit of 10 micrograms a day. But scientists have discovered that dental amalgams alone can produce between1 and 29 micrograms of mercury vapor a day. So some people exceed the safety limit for mercury just with their fillings.

(Vision cuts to BDA interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): Do you believe it is safe to use amalgam in children?

JOHN HUNT (Chief Executive, British Dental Association): Yes, certainly. And I've treated my children with amalgam and I have no doubt that when they have their own children they will also.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

VOICE OVER: In Sweden, Dr Lars Friberg, the world authority on metals poisoning, remains baffled at the various attempts by dental lobbies to maintain their rearguard defense for a material whose time, he feels, has come.

(Vision cuts to Friberg interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): British dentists say that there's no evidence that it shouldn't be continued for use in children.

Dr. LARS FRIBERG (Consultant, World Health Organization): Yes, I think there is no basis for such a statement.

MANGOLD (BBC): Are you saying children are particularly vulnerable, or what?

FRIBERG: They are definitely particularly vulnerable. We know that if you take the young child, I mean it takes a few years after birth until the brain is developed and we know that the brain in the children are much more sensitive than the adults.

MANGOLD (BBC): You don't think that putting mercury into the brain of a child is a good thing at all, do you?

FRIBERG: No I don't think so.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

VOICE OVER: But it's not just young children at risk. Even the unborn have mercury pollution in their brains from their mother's amalgams. This evidence came to light in a study just completed by Professor Gustav Drasch, a forensic toxicologist. He examined the brains of dead babies and fetuses and found mercury deposits had crossed the placenta into their tiny skulls.

(Vision cuts to interview)

Dr. GUSTAV DRASCH (University of Munich): I think the implications are serious. It is a question whether or not we have to restrict the application of dental amalgam to women, not only in child bearing age but even before. Because you must see that if, for instance, a girl of fifteen, she get an amalgam filling, these fillings lie in your mouths for ten years, and all the time this filling release some mercury, and if this girl go pregnant, let me say five years after, she has a mercury inlay in her mouth and the mercury goes to the baby. So really the question now being discussed in Germany today is, not to forbid it, but to speak about restriction of amalgam fillings for women from, let me say, from fifteen to fifty years.

(Vision cuts to BDA interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): Do you believe it's safe to use amalgam in pregnant women?

PETER GORDON (Science Advisor, British Dental Association): There is no evidence to say that it's unsafe.

MANGOLD (BBC): But are you saying it's safe to use it in pregnant women?

JOHN HUNT (Chief Executive, British Dental Association): Yes, there's no doubt that the available data we have at present demonstrates that amalgam is just as safe as any other material that we may use for pregnant women.

MANGOLD (BBC): This is terribly important, isn't it? Mercury crosses the placenta and goes into the unborn.

HUNT: But you have to...Before you say it is dangerous or poses a risk, you have to say that mercury in those places is dangerous. And there's no evidence to suggest that merely because it is found in the kidneys and so on, or fetuses and young children, that it is a hazard to health.

MANGOLD (BBC): Do you think mercury, one of the most toxic metals known to man, is a good thing in the brain of an unborn child?

HUNT: There's no proven, as far as I know, there's nothing to prove that it is causing any damage.

MANGOLD (BBC): Don't you think that this is something that ought to be put into your file?

GORDON: I don't see why we should necessarily worry about the population at large if there are no proven arguments one way or the other; that the fact that it is there and detectable doesn't mean to say that it is potentially doing any damage.

MANGOLD (BBC): I have to say, gentlemen, I haven't met anybody who thinks that mercury in the brain of an unborn child is a good thing.

GORDON: But you can probably, with a correct analysis, find a whole lot of other substances in the brain that perhaps shouldn't be there.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

VOICE OVER: As these are the men who give scientific advice to British dentists, it's not surprising that pregnant women are still treated with amalgam fillings despite the possible health hazards to their unborn babies. In Britain they're encouraged to take free treatment under national health.

Joe Rich is an ordinary NHS dentist. Like thousands of others he's been told little about the latest scientific evidence about mercury. He doesn't know that much of it points towards the health hazards of amalgam to vulnerable groups such as the expectant mother in his chair.

(Vision cuts to new interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): You're happy to place amalgam fillings in the mouths of babies, children, and pregnant women?

JOE RICH (NHS Dentist): Indeed.

MANGOLD (BBC): No problem in that respect at all?

RICH: I have no reason to doubt the efficacy of the treatment, and that there are few if any dangers to the patient in using it.

(Vision cuts to Friberg interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): We know that the mercury goes into the brain of the unborn child. Can this, under any circumstances, be a good thing?

Dr. LARS FRIBERG (Consultant, World Health Organization): No. I would say no. I think that you should try to avoid to implant toxic metals in the mouth.

MANGOLD (BBC): Why then does an organization like the British Dental Association say that mercury is safe for everybody unless they're allergic to it?

FRIBERG: Well I don't know why they say it. That's impossible for me to answer.

MANGOLD (BBC): You've written the standard textbook on the toxicology of metals and you don't agree with them, do you?

FRIBERG: No, I don't.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): Sweden, the first country in the world whose parliament has banned amalgam. They've taken the dangers so seriously that amalgam's use will end within three years at the latest, and within six years all mercury will be outlawed. The Swedes have read the writing on the wall and decided to take action.

Faced with opposition from the dental lobbies and anxious at the potential legal implications, parliament carefully wrapped the legislation up in a total environmental package. But members of parliament who had pushed for the ban knew what the real targets were.

(Vision cuts to new interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): People say that the only reason the Swedes are banning dental amalgam is on environmental grounds. Now is that true?

SIW PERSSON (Member of Swedish Parliament): No, really not. It's one reason, but the most important reason is, of course, a health reason.

MANGOLD (BBC): Why has Sweden been the first country to ban dental amalgam because there's still no evidence, there's no final proof, that dental amalgam actually hurts human beings?

PERSSON: We said we have seen enough. Now we have to stop it, before much more people are more sick than they are today.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

VOICE OVER: The use of amalgam in children under the age of nineteen will be totally banned exactly one year from now. All amalgam fillings for adults will cease by 1997. The Swedes are fully aware that there is still no proven evidence that dental amalgam harms humans. But they've been reading the latest evidence, and their assessment of the risk-benefit ratio has been changed by it forever. The health benefits of amalgam, they judge, are no longer worth the risks.

Now, other countries are following Sweden's lead. In Germany, amalgam is banned for patients with kidney problems and advised to be used with great caution in children and pregnant women. Austria plans to ban mercury in amalgams within six years. And in California, a new law now demands that dentists who use amalgam display a health warning to their patients.

Germany and the headquarters of Degussa, one of the world's larger manufacturers of dental amalgam. Even they've now decided to get out of amalgam, thus abandoning nearly half their dental products turnover. They say that there are innocent commercial reasons for this, but one of their executives suggests there's prudence in the decision too.

(Vision cuts to new interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): You are saying that despite all this new scientific evidence that it happens to be a commercial coincidence that you're getting out of amalgam?

Dr. MATTHIAS KUHNER (Senior Manager, Degussa): It was a decision that was driven by business reasons.

MANGOLD (BBC): Which would include legal reasons?

KUHNER: Definitely when you are looking at a business, legal action can have an influence on your business. It can greatly increase the cost of your business if you have to take a lot of legal actions, or have to deal with legal actions, even if you are sure that in most cases, or in all the cases, you come out with being found not guilty.

MANGOLD (BBC): And finally, Dr. Kuhner, thank you for being so patient with me, in that sense surely the writing is on the wall for amalgam?

KUHNER: Well, as I said before, I feel that use of amalgam is going to decline even more in many nations.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

VOICE OVER: Instead, the company is concentrating on making composites, the plastic alternatives already used extensively in front teeth. Currently, they're not as cheap and durable as amalgams, and Degussa, like many competitors, is hard at work looking for the dream composite that will rival the cost and strength of amalgam.

So, is there an acceptable alternative to mercury amalgam? We've learned of a scientific breakthrough of a new mercury-free alloy at this Federal research institute near Washington. But they won't let us film inside.

The truth is, how can the demise of mercury amalgam be announced without acknowledging that mercury shouldn't have been there in the first place?

The new material, wrapped in commercial secrecy behind these walls, will be hailed not as a substitute for amalgam for reasons of health, but as an improvement on it. This cover story will please the dentists and the fillings should be safe for patients too.

(Vision cuts to Eggleston interview)

Dr. DAVID EGGLESTON (University of Southern California): The material is here and developed. It has to go through trials and research before it becomes approved, and that will take a few years.

MANGOLD (BBC): How long?

EGGLESTON: I've been told in some quarters to expect two years for that process to be completed.

MANGOLD (BBC): Will it be more expensive?

EGGLESTON: It'll be exactly the same cost, maybe even a little less expensive. It uses the same equipment for placement and actually has a superior strength once it's in place.

MANGOLD (BBC): And will it last as long?

EGGLESTON: The predictions are that it will last longer, that it has a superior strength.

MANGOLD (BBC): Well, let's get this absolutely straight. The reason this new material has been worked on is in order to eliminate mercury from the entire chemistry, yes?

EGGLESTON: There's no question. There's no incentive to develop this material other than to get rid of mercury.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): So that's the concern with which the whole amalgam issue is handled overseas. What's Britain doing? Nothing much really. We had hoped to bring you an interview with someone from the Department of Health but they refused to talk to us on camera. We would have asked them what, if anything, has changed since 1986 when they last looked at the issue and decided that there was no problem with amalgam.

Indeed, they said the controversy didn't even merit research priority. They've just handed us a four line statement. I've read it but there's nothing new in this.

But while government ignores the issue there is a new awareness in some quarters that patients need greater protection against the possible health hazards.

Stephen Challacombe is Professor of Medicine at Guys Hospital in London and one of Britain's top dentists. He has bothered to keep up with the new research and finds much of it compelling.

(Vision cuts to new interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): Are you satisfied that amalgam is safe?

Dr. STEPHEN CHALLACOMBE (Guy's Hospital): No, I don't think so. I think the evidence over the last few years has really suggested that we should have another look at the ultimate safety of amalgams.

MANGOLD (BBC): What do you make of the official government view, the Department of Health view, which is that there's no problem and therefore it doesn't even merit the priority of further research?

CHALLACOMBE: I think things have changed. A number of very good groups in Europe, in Germany, Scandinavian countries of course, who have been very much aware of the environmental effects of mercury and have looked in some detail at possible biological effects from mercury from amalgams. I'm a researcher, I'm a clinical academic, I'm very keen that we should be absolutely sure of our facts, and there's no doubt in my mind that we should be supporting research in this and other countries. We shouldn't be left behind.

MANGOLD (BBC): And in that sense you wouldn't agree with the government position at all?

CHALLACOMBE: If the government position is still that we don't need research, no I think that's outdated.

(Vision cuts to BDA interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): Aren't you in danger of making exactly the same mistake that was made over lead, asbestos, and DDT? That we had to wait for too long, there were too many tragic side effects before the accumulation of scientific evidence showed conclusively that these were highly dangerous substances.

JOHN HUNT (Chief Executive, British Dental Association): Well, we can only rely upon the evidence that we have to date. And I don't think that the amount of mercury that is released, and we know it's released from amalgam restorations, there's no evidence that, to date, that it does cause any trouble.

(Vision cuts away from interview)

VOICE OVER: At Murray Vimy's surgery in Calgary, a young women anxious to avoid passing mercury to any future child, has an amalgam filling extracted. Paradoxically this process has its health hazards too, because the drilling out creates a dangerous surge of mercury vapor. Hence all the protective equipment on both sides of the chair.

Extraction of fillings is a serious step unless medically indicated. Patients should consult their doctors or dentists before making a decision.

(Vision cuts to Challacombe interview)

MANGOLD (BBC): Professor, can I ask you to, in the briefest and simplest way, give advice to people who will have seen this film and who will wonder if they should take their amalgam fillings out. What is your considered advice?

CHALLACOMBE: I think it would be premature for people to replace their amalgam fillings. No, the answer is do not rush to your dentists to have your amalgam fillings replaced. I think there is clearly a need for further research and when all that is through, in the long term there may be different advice. But there is a danger in doing more harm than good at this stage, so do not rush out and have your amalgam fillings replaced.

VOICE OVER: In the dark places where men work with mercury, turning old fillings into new, they treat the volatile metal with great respect. Yet those charged with the responsibility of keeping dentists and their patients informed deny these realities by insisting there is still no final proof of amalgam's harm to humans. But in science, absence of proof is not proof of absence. Ask the men who take the risks.

This transcript was first posted on Fluoridealert.org

http://www.fluoridealert.org/BBC-mercury.htm

Administrator

mercury-exposure-avatarFor years I've read news stories about dental mercury amalgam fillings that failed to ask vital follow up questions for one to form a better understanding of the true risks involved with exposure to mercury fillings. Rarely was a toxicologist, neurologist or bio-chemist interviewed. Instead, the stories would always give dentists such prominence when promoting the safety of a substance of which they knew nothing about, all while never acknowleding the much lower levels of mercury at which our government has removed other products from the market. So now I'm doing what I can to help raise awareness of the many dangerous aspects of dental mercury fillings.

Website: www.mercuryexposure.info

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