Literature DB >> 7481688

[Mercury emission measurements in a crematorium. The dentistry aspects].

C Matter-Grütter1, R Baillod, T Imfeld, F Lutz.   

Abstract

The amount of mercury released during cremation was calculated in a major Swiss city at two crematoria. A total of 60 mercury "output" calculations were carried out by the Swiss Material Testing Institute (Empa). The amount of mercury initially present ("input") in the dentitions of 54 deceased persons was assessed from their post-mortem dental radiographs and by clinical examination. The correlation between the "input" and the "output" was 0.93, irrespective of the age at death. However, the "input" was calculated to be 1.8 times higher than the "output" for the deceased people with amalgam restorations. In the blind study, the difference was 1.3 times. The main source of mercury was undoubtedly the amalgam restorations. The amount of mercury recorded during the cremation of 88% of the deceased people without amalgam restorations was under the accepted level of 200 micrograms/m3. However, in 3 cases, the amount of mercury was slightly more than 200 micrograms/m3. In contrast, the amount of mercury recorded during the cremation of only 18% of the deceased people with amalgam restorations was less than the accepted level of 200 micrograms/m3. The amount of mercury contamination during cremation as a result of amalgam fillings is so low that no additional preventive measures are required at the crematoria.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7481688

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Schweiz Monatsschr Zahnmed        ISSN: 0256-2855


  2 in total

1.  Environmental impacts caused by cemeteries and crematoria, new funeral technologies, and preferences of the Northeastern and Southern Brazilian population as for the funeral process.

Authors:  Nicholas Joseph Tavares da Cruz; Álvaro Guillermo Rojas Lezana; Paulo da Cruz Freire Dos Santos; Ibsen Mateus Bittencourt Santana Pinto; Claudio Zancan; Gustavo Henrique Silva de Souza
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2017-09-07       Impact factor: 4.223

2.  Modernity in medicine and hygiene at the end of the 19th century: the example of cremation.

Authors:  Alessandro Porro; Bruno Falconi; Carlo Cristini; Lorenzo Lorusso; Antonia F Franchini
Journal:  J Public Health Res       Date:  2012-02-14
  2 in total

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