Literature DB >> 1292453

Documented clinical side-effects to dental amalgam.

M F Ziff.   

Abstract

Since all dental restorative materials are foreign substances, their potential for producing adverse health effects is determined by their relative toxicity and bioavailability, as well as by host susceptibility. Adverse health effects to dental restoratives may be local in the oral cavity or systemic, depending on the ability of released components to enter the body and, if so, on their rate of absorption. The medical scientific community is now in general agreement that patients with dental amalgam fillings are chronically exposed to mercury, that the average daily absorption of mercury from dental amalgam is from 3 to 17 micrograms per day, and that the amalgam mercury absorption averages 1.25-6.5 times the average mercury absorption from dietary sources (World Health Organization, 1991). The health significance of this chronic mercury exposure is now being investigated by several medical research groups.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1292453     DOI: 10.1177/08959374920060010601

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Dent Res        ISSN: 0895-9374


  1 in total

1.  Mechanical Properties Comparing Composite Fiber Length to Amalgam.

Authors:  Richard C Petersen; Perng-Ru Liu
Journal:  J Compos       Date:  2016
  1 in total

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