A professional musician from Arlington Heights suffers from
mysterious rashes and lip blisters. A dental hygienist in Hoffman Estates
battles migraines. And a social worker in Prospect Heights is diagnosed with
multiple sclerosis.
All three tried treating their ailments using a controversial method: by
having dentists remove and replace their so-called "silver" amalgam tooth
fillings, which contain about 50 percent mercury. And all three swear they
experienced life-changing health improvements.
Their personal testimonies are part of what makes dental amalgam, the silver
lining for hundreds of millions of American mouths, one of the most divisive
issues in dentistry. Though it's one of the oldest materials in oral health
care--used by people of all ages for the last 150 years--anti-mercury groups
are pushing the startling message that mercury residing in the mouth can leach
into the body and cause illness.
"I thought my career was over," said Arlington Heights' Matt Comerford, now a
trumpet player with the Lyric Opera who was suffering from painful sores along
his gums. He began investigating the metals in his mouth and eventually had
nine silver fillings replaced with a mercury-free alter-native material.
"Within a week [of having the amalgams replaced], everything healed,"
Comerford said.
Amalgam, most dentists admit, is crude and ugly, but they say it's a valuable
option because it's strong, durable and relatively cheap.
And studies have shown that there is insufficient evidence to link it to
health problems (with the exception of allergic reactions), according to the
American Dental Association and several federal agencies, including the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Regardless, anti-mercury groups are appalled by the notion that the toxic
element, which is considered a hazardous waste by the Environmental Protection
Agency, is safe when it's packed inside a tooth. They argue that although it
was once thought to be inert inside the mouth, studies now show that mercury
can be emitted in minute amounts of vapor and absorbed by the patient through
inhalation and ingestion.
At Doctor's Data, a Chicago lab that specializes in trace-metals analysis,
clinicians have found that the amount of mercury in a person's stool is highly
correlated to the number of amalgams in the mouth.
"What stool testing drives home is that parts of the amalgams don't stay in
the teeth and we're swallowing mercury," said Dean Bass, a chemist at Doctor's
Data and a scientist at Argonne National Laboratories. "But it doesn't
necessarily tell you how much mercury the body absorbs."
A long-running controversy
The debate over silver amalgam dates at least to 1845, when the now-defunct
American Academy of Dental Surgeons asked its members to sign a pledge never
to use it. Though amalgam use has been declining since the 1970s because more
eye-pleasing options are available and cavities are smaller, federal lawmakers
have introduced a bipartisan bill to ban silver/mercury fillings for children
and pregnant and nursing women and to phase them out completely in three
years.
In California, dentists are required by state law to post a warning that
dental amalgams "cause exposure to mercury, a chemical known to the state of
California to cause birth defects or other reproductive harm."
"The ADA is wrong that the issue is `safety.' The issue is `risk,'" said
Charlie Brown, national counsel for Consumers for Dental Choice and Coalition
for Mercury-Free Dentistry. He has filed a petition asking the Federal Trade
Commission to investigate the ADA and the Connecticut State Dental Association
for what the groups claims is making false, deceptive and unsubstantiated
claims in promoting silver/mercury amalgam.
"On this point scientists agree: Mercury is a virulent neurotoxin that can
permanently harm the developing brain of a child or fetus. Yet a recent Zogby
poll shows three in five people don't know that `silver' fillings have
mercury," said Brown, who pointed out that silver fillings are in fact mainly
mercury.
The ADA staunchly defends the safety of amalgam, still used in about 30
percent of restorations. Amalgam, made by mixing elemental liquid mercury with
an alloy powder composed of silver, tin, copper and sometimes smaller amounts
of other metals, hardens quickly and tolerates saliva. This makes it useful
for treating squirmy young children or special-needs patients who have a hard
time sitting still.
Money and ethics
Some dental insurance companies don't cover the more expensive alternatives to
amalgam. And because science doesn't definitively link the silver fillings to
health problems, the ADA considers it unethical for dentists to tell patients
that removing amalgams can improve health.
"Amalgam has the longest history, the most data and the largest number of
studies supporting it. Yet time after time, we have to come back and address
it," said Dr. Fred Eichmiller, director of the ADA Foundation's Paffenbarger
Resource Center, where alternatives to amalgams have been invented.
Critics argue that the issue also is environmental. Mercury is emitted into
the air when bodies with mercury fillings are cremated. It gets into the water
when fillings are removed and leftover material is not disposed of properly.
"Amalgams don't need to be used in the 21st Century," said Downers Grove
dentist Janet Stopka, who uses composite, porcelain and gold.
For consumers, the decision whether to replace amalgams can be a difficult
one. Urine, hair and feces can all be tested for mercury levels and chelating
agents can pull mercury out of the organs. But the results don't necessarily
tell whether there is enough mercury present to pose a health risk and an
official diagnosis of "mercury poisoning" can be tentative.
Swapping out old fillings can be expensive; each replacement can cost $75 to
$200. And there are no guaranteed benefits.
Nevertheless, Dawn Quast, a dental hygienist for Dr. John Rothchild in Hoffman
Estates, decided to have four small fillings replaced after she witnessed both
small and profound improvements in Rothchild's patients who had amalgams
replaced.
"I had a migraine the night I had the last silver one removed and haven't had
one since [in 12 years]," Quast said.
Rothchild, a mercury-free dentist, said he doesn't push people into having
silver fillings removed.
No guarantees
"I never promise any medical cures because you can't," he said. Instead, he
presents both sides of the issue on his Web site and provides patient
referrals. "If people come in asking about amalgams, I'll tell them," he said.
"If they're there for basic dentistry, I don't say anything."
Linda Brocato of Prospect Heights went to several dentists before she made the
difficult decision to have her 16 silver fillings removed. Her problems began
in 1980, when she looked in the mirror one morning and noticed her right eye
was drooping. Seven years and dozens of health issues later, the former social
worker was crippled, diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.
It wasn't until Brocato heard about the Minneapolis-based group Dental Amalgam
Mercury Syndrome (DAMS), however, that she began to believe she had mercury
poisoning.
Two weeks after she had her last amalgams replaced, Brocato said her slurred
speech began to disappear and her strength and balance improved. She knows the
symptoms of MS come and go, which could explain her improved health, but she
is convinced that removing the silver fillings made a big difference.
"I have five pages of improvements," said Brocato, 56, who is still in a
wheelchair but no longer takes medication for MS. She is now one of the
Illinois coordinators for DAMS. "I don't know how people can say there isn't
evidence."
Help on the Web
For more information:
The American Dental Association: ada.org.
The International Academy of Oral Medicine & Toxicology: iaomt.org.
Consumers for Dental Choice, www.toxicteeth.org.
jdeardorff@tribune.com


