Medical Forum / General / Dentistry / February 2005
Thousand Fear Mercury Poisoning From Fillings
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Jan - 10 Jan 2005 23:32 GMT http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/220366.stm
Thousands fear mercury poisoning from fillings
There is a big question mark over the safety of mercury fillings
Thousands of people are concerned that mercury dental fillings are to blame for their poor health, BBC East Health Correspondent Gill Higgins reports. Thousands of people have called a helpline after hearing the story of a woman from Northampton who claimed mercury was making her ill.
Pam Clayton was suffering from fatigue and dizzy spells for years, but says cleansing her body of mercury changed her life.
For years, she couldn't go anywhere because she frequently collapsed, suffering from asthma-like symptoms and chronic fatigue.
But all this changed when she had her mercury fillings removed and started to clear the metal from her body.
Ms Clayton said: "l can do the ironing again, if people ask me out I can go, I can drive the car whenever I want to and I've got my life back again.
Since setting up a mercury helpline, Mrs Clayton has received thousands of calls and letters.
"I get a couple of hundred letters a day, my mum says I've woken the world up," she said.
"I never realised there were so many ill people out there."
Requests for filling removal are becoming more and more common, and some dentists are keen to oblige, running mercury-free practices.
Highly toxic
Dr Tom Nyerges, a dentist from Luton, said: "It is now scientifically proven that small amounts of mercury are released from amalgam fillings every time you chew or have a hot drink.
"It is very small amounts and nobody is really sure what effect it has, but mercury is a highly toxic substance, we know that for sure.
"I don't feel comfortable with that. I would not want highly toxic substances leaking into my mouth, no matter how small amounts they are, and I don't feel comfortable putting it into anyone else's teeth."
Researchers in Northampton have discovered that crematorium workers have twice the level of normal mercury contamination in their bodies.
Scientist Sue Maloney said crematoria should be constantly monitored. Simple measures could be taken to reduce the threat of mercury poisoning, she said.
"You can get a small box containing selenium which you can place on top of a coffin. It has been shown to take up to 85% of the admissions," she said.
Total ban
Mercury has been linked to asthma Some countries are taking action. Austria and Sweden already have a total ban, and in Germany mercury fillings carry a health warning against their use in children and pregnant women.
The government says mercury is not a health risk, although it does advise against dental treatment in pregnant women.
Scientific views on the health hazards of mercury may differ, but the public is taking matters into its own hands.
It is good news for Cambridgeshire firm Fulcrum Healthcare which produces a product said to remove mercury from the body.
Fulcrum was supplying Humet directly to dentists, but now feels they should sell directly to the public through pharmacies and health shops.
A company spokesman said: "We've done clinical trials, and tested it in hospitals in cases of metal poisoining and it's shown the product is effective and safe."
The British Dental Association said it was unnecessary to remove amalgam fillings, citing the findings of an expert government committee which concluded they posed no toxic risk.
A spokesman said: "Filling materials must be safe. Amalgam is still the best performing material for certain types of fillings, and most dentists will continue to use it in the absence of medical or toxicololgical advice to discontinue its use.
"No dentist would promote use of amalgam in the face of evidence of harm."
Joel M. Eichen - 10 Jan 2005 23:58 GMT >There is a big question mark over the safety of mercury fillings Not here there's not.
Shyster - 11 Jan 2005 00:23 GMT > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/220366.stm > [quoted text clipped - 9 lines] > Pam Clayton was suffering from fatigue and dizzy spells for years, but says > cleansing her body of mercury changed her life. Maybe it was that bottle of vodka she drank every day.
> For years, she couldn't go anywhere because she frequently collapsed, suffering > from asthma-like symptoms and chronic fatigue. And the 3 packs of cigs lol
> But all this changed when she had her mercury fillings removed and started to > clear the metal from her body. [quoted text clipped - 14 lines] > > Highly toxic So don't use them if you think it's causing a problem. Use gold or white fillings.
> Dr Tom Nyerges, a dentist from Luton, said: "It is now scientifically proven > that small amounts of mercury are released from amalgam fillings every time you [quoted text clipped - 49 lines] > > "No dentist would promote use of amalgam in the face of evidence of harm." Joel M. Eichen - 11 Jan 2005 00:26 GMT >> Pam Clayton was suffering from fatigue and dizzy spells for years, but >says >> cleansing her body of mercury changed her life. > >Maybe it was that bottle of vodka she drank every day. YUP, t'was the vodka.
Gregory P. Cole, B.S., D.D.S. \(Flap\) - 11 Jan 2005 16:12 GMT Hal Huggins probably gave it to her....Quack!
 Signature Gregory P. Cole, B.S., D.D.S. (Flap) www.smilesforalifetime.com Flaps Dental Blog http://flapsblog.blogspot.com/ Liberae sunt nostrae cogitationes
>>> Pam Clayton was suffering from fatigue and dizzy spells for years, but >>says [quoted text clipped - 3 lines] > > YUP, t'was the vodka. ChuckMSRD - 02 Feb 2005 11:06 GMT >> cleansing her body of mercury changed her life. Certainly changed mine. Argue what you will whether the major origin was seafood or 22 amalgams but... glad I'm on the road to detox.
Chuck http://www.mercurypoisoned.com/chuck_balzer.html
Joel M. Eichen - 02 Feb 2005 11:47 GMT >Certainly changed mine. Argue what you will whether the major origin was >seafood or 22 amalgams but... glad I'm on the road to detox. Have you tried some of Jan's wonderful therapies for detox (in private of course)?
Joel
Tony Bad - 02 Feb 2005 14:39 GMT > >> cleansing her body of mercury changed her life. > [quoted text clipped - 3 lines] > Chuck > http://www.mercurypoisoned.com/chuck_balzer.html Did you happen to see the recent PBS special on mercury? It primarily spoke about amalgam from environmental and industrial pollution sources. I thought about your case when they spoke of a young boy, from a health conscious family, who had started to show signs of neurological breakdown and was found to have high levels of mercury traced to a diet high in tuna and other similar types of fish. He was eating tuna twice a day! Not sure if it will be repeated, but it was interesting.
T
Jan - 02 Feb 2005 22:13 GMT >Subject: Re: Thousand Fear Mercury Poisoning From Fillings >From: "Tony Bad" spamspamspam@bakedbeans.spam [quoted text clipped - 11 lines] >Did you happen to see the recent PBS special on mercury? It primarily spoke >about amalgam from environmental and industrial pollution sources No little bell in you head went;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Ding, ding, ding.
Have you any concern about amalgam ruining the environment????
Naaa,
You would rather talk about fish.
Let me remind you,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Source Average Human Daily Dose of MercuryDental Amalgam 3.0 - 17.0 ug/day (hgvapor)Fish and Seafood 2.3 ug/day (methylmercury)Other Food 0.3 ug/day (inorganichg)Air &Water Negligible traces(World Health Organization, Environmental Health Criteria 118: InorganicMercury, Geneva, 1991.)
http://www.lichtenberg.dk/mercury_vapour_in_the_oral_cavit.htm
Mercury from amalgams is the number one source in people.
"Mercury has been demonstrated as one possible cause of Alzheimer's Disease, and the World Health Organization says that people with amalgams get more mercury from their fillings than from all other sources combined.
http://es.epa.gov/ncer_abstracts/sbir/other/water/roberts.html
Cleanup of Dental Amalgam Waste To Meet Sewer Regulation
Awarding Agency: National Institutes of Health SBIR Contract Number: R43ES507886 Title: Cleanup of Dental Amalgam Waste To Meet Sewer Regulation Principal Investigator: Daryl L. Roberts Company Name: ADA Technologies, Inc. Honeywell Center, Suite 110 Englewood, CO 80112 Telephone Number: Business Representative: Project Period: Project Amount: $93,662 Research Category: Water Description:
In the United States and abroad, there has been a great deal of concern by the
public and health officials over the detrimental health effects caused by bioaccumulation of mercury in lakes and streams, resulting in regulatory limits for a variety of sources. Dental amalgam waste is attracting substantial attention as a major contributor to the mercury burden of municipal water treatment plants. In response, local authorities are implementing ordinances requiring dental offices to recover waste dental amalgam. Conventional technologies for removing waste amalgam from operatory discharge water have proven insufficient to meet stringent discharge limits (typically 50 pg/L). In
some cases, dental clinics have been forced to disconnect from the sewer systems and have incurred expensive hazardous waste disposal charges. ADA Technologies proposes to develop and test a novel system to reduce mercury below 50 pg/L that will be comprised of a patented novel sorbent for removing dissolved mercury, membrane filtration technology for removing fine amalgam particles, and conventional technology for recovering the large amalgam particles. The ADA sorbent has demonstrated the ability to remove ionic and elemental mercury from wastewater to levels below 1 g/L. This system will be available to thousands of commercial dental offices.
http://www.toxicteeth.org/pressRoom_releases_031903_polluters.cfm
THE NATION Dentists Biggest Mercury Polluters, New Study Finds Health: The metal is widely used in fillings and ends up in the nation's waste water.
By ELIZABETH SHOGREN TIMES STAFF WRITER June 6, 2002 WASHINGTON - Coal-fired power plants are notorious for being the biggest source of mercury pollution in the air. But now, new attention is being directed at another, much less known source of mercury contamination in water--dentists. A new report shows that dentists are the largest single source of mercury pollution in waste water funneled into the nation's treatment plants. Mercury is a potent toxin that can damage the human brain, spinal cord, kidney and liver, and is especially dangerous for unborn children. While many other sources of mercury pollution have drastically cut their use of the heavy metal, dentists continue to use it widely in fillings. "Pretty much all the mercury they're using gets released into the environment. Why aren't they doing more to reduce that use?" said Michael Bender, director of the Mercury Policy Project, a foundation-funded group that was one of the authors of the study. Power plants emit mercury into the air and it falls into streams and rivers. Many dentists flush it down their drains and it goes directly into waste-water treatment plants, which do not effectively filter it from the water. In a statement responding to the report, the American Dental Assn. said it was aware that some particles from fillings end up in waste water, and it urges dentists to follow proper procedures for handling and recycling the composite used for fillings, which they refer to as "amalgam." But the association argued that the mercury from their fillings remains in a form that is not harmful to humans. "However, a 1996 study found that when amalgam particles were subjected to simulated waste-water treatment processes, no soluble mercury was detected, even at a concentration of 1 part per billion," according to the statement. The group stressed that it was currently implementing a new plan to address the problem. The new report's authors said that dentists, through voluntary or mandatory measures, should trap their waste mercury before it flows into plumbing fixtures that have been contaminated with mercury for years. The report referred to a 2001 study by the Assn. of Metropolitan Sewerage Agencies that evaluated seven major municipal waste-water treatment plants and determined that dental uses were "by far" the greatest contributors to the mercury reaching their facilities. They were responsible for 40% of the load, three times more than the next largest contributor. Several other countries regulate releases of dental mercury. In Canada, a new standard requires dentists to trap the pieces of filling before they go down the drain. The goal is to reduce releases by 95% by 2005. In May, the New Hampshire Legislature became the first in the nation to pass legislation governing disposal methods for dental mercury. The California Assembly considered a measure to phase out the use of mercury in fillings but did not adopt it. The report suggests that mercury in dentistry has become the exception while other major users of mercury have changed their practices. In 1985 dental facilities used 3% of all the mercury used nationwide. Last year, although dentists used less mercury, their use accounted for 20% of all uses. Only two other industries--wiring devices and switches and chloralkali--used more. Gina Solomon, a physician who focuses on the health effects of mercury for the Natural Resources Defense Council, said that there was still controversy about whether the fillings put dental patients at risk. And she stressed that those who have such fillings should not get them removed, because taking them out heightens the chance of exposure. However, she said the science is clear that the mercury that goes down the drain can end up in the food chain. "There is scientific consensus that mercury that ends up in the waste water and water bodies will accumulate in the fish and pose a direct human health problem to people who eat the fish; that is uncontroversial and is something that can be fixed,"
Joel M. Eichen - 02 Feb 2005 22:47 GMT >>Did you happen to see the recent PBS special on mercury? It primarily spoke >>about amalgam from environmental and industrial pollution sources [quoted text clipped - 8 lines] > >You would rather talk about fish. Jan, someone asked why you recommend the coffee enemas?
Any ideas?
Joel
ChuckMSRD - 03 Feb 2005 09:45 GMT >Jan, someone asked why you recommend the coffee enemas? > >Any ideas? > >Joel Do you think after the 6,000th time it will all of the sudden become funny? Get some help dude!
Chuck
Joel M. Eichen - 03 Feb 2005 12:12 GMT >>Jan, someone asked why you recommend the coffee enemas? >> [quoted text clipped - 6 lines] > >Chuck This is not meant as humor. It is to continue to continue to warn people about what a kook Jan Drew is.
Joel
MC60614 - 08 Feb 2005 08:59 GMT Who asked?...MC
Joel M. Eichen - 08 Feb 2005 11:39 GMT >Who asked?...MC There were 4,342,783 questions about it. You may have missed it.
Joel
MC60614 - 07 Feb 2005 03:20 GMT Really, with all this pollution in the air and water how does one stay clean ?...MC
Jan - 07 Feb 2005 06:40 GMT >From: mc60614@aol.com (MC60614) Hmmm, MC, if you would show what you are replying to, someone might have a clue as to what you are rambling about.
Of course trolling sems to be your thing.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/220366.stm
Thousands fear mercury poisoning from fillings
There is a big question mark over the safety of mercury fillings
Thousands of people are concerned that mercury dental fillings are to blame for
their poor health, BBC East Health Correspondent Gill Higgins reports. Thousands of people have called a helpline after hearing the story of a woman from Northampton who claimed mercury was making her ill.
Pam Clayton was suffering from fatigue and dizzy spells for years, but says cleansing her body of mercury changed her life.
For years, she couldn't go anywhere because she frequently collapsed, suffering
from asthma-like symptoms and chronic fatigue.
But all this changed when she had her mercury fillings removed and started to clear the metal from her body.
Ms Clayton said: "l can do the ironing again, if people ask me out I can go, I can drive the car whenever I want to and I've got my life back again.
Since setting up a mercury helpline, Mrs Clayton has received thousands of calls and letters.
"I get a couple of hundred letters a day, my mum says I've woken the world up,"
she said.
"I never realised there were so many ill people out there."
Requests for filling removal are becoming more and more common, and some dentists are keen to oblige, running mercury-free practices.
Highly toxic
Dr Tom Nyerges, a dentist from Luton, said: "It is now scientifically proven that small amounts of mercury are released from amalgam fillings every time you
chew or have a hot drink.
"It is very small amounts and nobody is really sure what effect it has, but mercury is a highly toxic substance, we know that for sure.
"I don't feel comfortable with that. I would not want highly toxic substances leaking into my mouth, no matter how small amounts they are, and I don't feel comfortable putting it into anyone else's teeth."
Researchers in Northampton have discovered that crematorium workers have twice the level of normal mercury contamination in their bodies.
Scientist Sue Maloney said crematoria should be constantly monitored. Simple measures could be taken to reduce the threat of mercury poisoning, she said.
"You can get a small box containing selenium which you can place on top of a coffin. It has been shown to take up to 85% of the admissions," she said.
Total ban
Mercury has been linked to asthma Some countries are taking action. Austria and Sweden already have a total ban, and in Germany mercury fillings carry a health warning against their use in children and pregnant women.
The government says mercury is not a health risk, although it does advise against dental treatment in pregnant women.
Scientific views on the health hazards of mercury may differ, but the public is
taking matters into its own hands.
It is good news for Cambridgeshire firm Fulcrum Healthcare which produces a product said to remove mercury from the body.
Fulcrum was supplying Humet directly to dentists, but now feels they should sell directly to the public through pharmacies and health shops.
A company spokesman said: "We've done clinical trials, and tested it in hospitals in cases of metal poisoining and it's shown the product is effective and safe."
The British Dental Association said it was unnecessary to remove amalgam fillings, citing the findings of an expert government committee which concluded
they posed no toxic risk.
A spokesman said: "Filling materials must be safe. Amalgam is still the best performing material for certain types of fillings, and most dentists will continue to use it in the absence of medical or toxicololgical advice to discontinue its use.
"No dentist would promote use of amalgam in the face of evidence of harm."
========
Ha ha ha
Joel M. Eichen - 07 Feb 2005 13:37 GMT >Hmmm, MC, if you would show what you are replying to, someone might have a clue >as to what you are rambling about. > >Of course trolling sems to be your thing. Jan uses a magnet plus coffee enemas to remove mercury.
Joel M. Eichen - 07 Feb 2005 13:37 GMT >Really, with all this pollution in the air and water how does one stay clean >?...MC Some people use a magnet to pull the mercury off.
MC60614 - 03 Feb 2005 23:24 GMT The last I heard was Fish 2 to 3 times a week Topps.. MC
Joel M. Eichen - 04 Feb 2005 00:27 GMT >The last I heard was Fish 2 to 3 times a week Topps.. MC Is that ice fishing or stream?
Joel
Jan - 04 Feb 2005 06:46 GMT http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/220366.stm
Thousands fear mercury poisoning from fillings
There is a big question mark over the safety of mercury fillings
Thousands of people are concerned that mercury dental fillings are to blame for
their poor health, BBC East Health Correspondent Gill Higgins reports. Thousands of people have called a helpline after hearing the story of a woman from Northampton who claimed mercury was making her ill.
Pam Clayton was suffering from fatigue and dizzy spells for years, but says cleansing her body of mercury changed her life.
For years, she couldn't go anywhere because she frequently collapsed, suffering
from asthma-like symptoms and chronic fatigue.
But all this changed when she had her mercury fillings removed and started to clear the metal from her body.
Ms Clayton said: "l can do the ironing again, if people ask me out I can go, I can drive the car whenever I want to and I've got my life back again.
Since setting up a mercury helpline, Mrs Clayton has received thousands of calls and letters.
"I get a couple of hundred letters a day, my mum says I've woken the world up,"
she said.
"I never realised there were so many ill people out there."
Requests for filling removal are becoming more and more common, and some dentists are keen to oblige, running mercury-free practices.
Highly toxic
Dr Tom Nyerges, a dentist from Luton, said: "It is now scientifically proven that small amounts of mercury are released from amalgam fillings every time you
chew or have a hot drink.
"It is very small amounts and nobody is really sure what effect it has, but mercury is a highly toxic substance, we know that for sure.
"I don't feel comfortable with that. I would not want highly toxic substances leaking into my mouth, no matter how small amounts they are, and I don't feel comfortable putting it into anyone else's teeth."
Researchers in Northampton have discovered that crematorium workers have twice the level of normal mercury contamination in their bodies.
Scientist Sue Maloney said crematoria should be constantly monitored. Simple measures could be taken to reduce the threat of mercury poisoning, she said.
"You can get a small box containing selenium which you can place on top of a coffin. It has been shown to take up to 85% of the admissions," she said.
Total ban
Mercury has been linked to asthma Some countries are taking action. Austria and Sweden already have a total ban, and in Germany mercury fillings carry a health warning against their use in children and pregnant women.
The government says mercury is not a health risk, although it does advise against dental treatment in pregnant women.
Scientific views on the health hazards of mercury may differ, but the public is
taking matters into its own hands.
It is good news for Cambridgeshire firm Fulcrum Healthcare which produces a product said to remove mercury from the body.
Fulcrum was supplying Humet directly to dentists, but now feels they should sell directly to the public through pharmacies and health shops.
A company spokesman said: "We've done clinical trials, and tested it in hospitals in cases of metal poisoining and it's shown the product is effective and safe."
The British Dental Association said it was unnecessary to remove amalgam fillings, citing the findings of an expert government committee which concluded
they posed no toxic risk.
A spokesman said: "Filling materials must be safe. Amalgam is still the best performing material for certain types of fillings, and most dentists will continue to use it in the absence of medical or toxicololgical advice to discontinue its use.
"No dentist would promote use of amalgam in the face of evidence of harm."
Joel M. Eichen - 04 Feb 2005 12:51 GMT >Thousands fear mercury poisoning from fillings > >There is a big question mark over the safety of mercury fillings I would say millions upon millions were posioned.
ChuckMSRD - 02 Feb 2005 11:07 GMT "No dentist would promote use of amalgam in the face of evidence of harm."
Hah! If only
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