| Literature DB >> 24420334 |
Kristin G Homme1, Janet K Kern, Boyd E Haley, David A Geier, Paul G King, Lisa K Sykes, Mark R Geier.
Abstract
Mercury dental amalgam has a long history of ostensibly safe use despite its continuous release of mercury vapor. Two key studies known as the Children's Amalgam Trials are widely cited as evidence of safety. However, four recent reanalyses of one of these trials now suggest harm, particularly to boys with common genetic variants. These and other studies suggest that susceptibility to mercury toxicity differs among individuals based on multiple genes, not all of which have been identified. These studies further suggest that the levels of exposure to mercury vapor from dental amalgams may be unsafe for certain subpopulations. Moreover, a simple comparison of typical exposures versus regulatory safety standards suggests that many people receive unsafe exposures. Chronic mercury toxicity is especially insidious because symptoms are variable and nonspecific, diagnostic tests are often misunderstood, and treatments are speculative at best. Throughout the world, efforts are underway to phase down or eliminate the use of mercury dental amalgam.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24420334 PMCID: PMC3905169 DOI: 10.1007/s10534-013-9700-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biometals ISSN: 0966-0844 Impact factor: 2.949
Amalgam exposures versus regulatory safety standards
| Exposure estimates for mercury vapor from amalgam (μg/d) | Safety standards for chronic mercury vapor inhalation | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| California EPA REL (reference exposure level) (2008) 0.03 μg/m3, converted to μg/d | US EPA RfC (reference concentration) (1995) 0.3 μg/m3, converted to μg/d | ||
| Estimated typical chronic intake from amalgam (FDA; ATSDR) | 1–5 | 0.5a | 4.9a |
| Estimated range of chronic intake from amalgam (WHO; ATSDR) | 1–22 | ||
| High-end chronic intake from amalgam (ATSDR) | ~100 | ||
The middle to upper ranges of exposures to mercury vapor from amalgam exceed the US EPA safety standard for chronic mercury inhalation. The tighter California EPA standard appears to preclude any amalgam fillings
aAssuming a ventilation rate of 16.2 m3/d (US EPA)