- Dentala material
- Hälsa
Hurra!
Ännu ett land närmar sig ett avslut på användingen av amalgam!
Artikeln är på engelska, men i korthet går den ut på att tandläkare i Frankrike avslutar användningen av amalgam på grund av riskerna för patienternas hälsa och de ofödda barnen risk för bestående kvicksilverskador, då kvicksilver frisätts från moderns amalgamfyllningar och överförs genom navelsträngen.
French dentists move away from mercury fillings
Should we be worried about our dental fillings? The material commonly used to fill holes in our teeth is half mercury, a toxic substance. Most people in France are living with mercury fillings, probably without even realising it. Doctors and patients are increasingly critical of what are technically known as dental amalgam fillings, allegedly responsible for certain neurological or auto-immune disorders, such as Alzheimer’s disease. Dr Michèle Panetier, a dentist in Paris, stopped using mercury fillings 15 years ago. “As a matter of precaution I would rather not use them for my patients,” she says.
Some countries ? Sweden last year, and Norway, Denmark and Germany, have banned or restricted the use of mercury fillings. But not France or the UK. The European commission is due to publish the findings of its review on dental amalgam fillings in March. In a preliminary report, published online in July, the company tasked with the study, Bio Intelligence Service, recommended phasing out mercury in dental care in Europe.
“Having heavy metals in your mouth is a source of toxic substances, which for some genetically predisposed patients may increase the risk of diseases such as disseminated sclerosis,” says neurologist Bernard Aranda, who is “on the whole in favour of a ban”.
“The first measure should be to ban [mercury] amalgams,” says Marie Grosman, a life science teacher, scientific adviser for the Non au Mercure Dentaire organisation and a member of the Réseau Environnement et Santé (RES) organisation. “We should pay attention to the materials dentists are using in our mouths. Toxicity tests are needed to guarantee that they are innocuous and compatible with our bodies. That would rule out mercury immediately, which has several proven toxic effects. Yet it is covered by the Social Security!” According to Grosman, “mercury passes through the placenta because dental mercury is found in the umbilical cord and in the developing child’s organs”.
A causal link between exposure to dental mercury and the onset of disease is difficult to establish, according to several organisations including WWF-France, RES and Générations Futures. However, for those of you who have mercury fillings it is preferable not to rush to the dentist’s to have them out. “Careless removal can be more dangerous due to the amount of mercury that may be released in a short time,” Grosman warns.
“France’s 40,000 dentists use it less and less for two reasons: the fuss about mercury has made them cautious, but also for reasons of appearance,” says Michel Goldberg, the spokesman for the French Dental Association (ADF).
A report published by France’s Healthcare Products Safety Agency (Afssaps)in 2005 concluded that mercury fillings were harmless. Three years later the health minister Roselyne Bachelot assured France’s upper chamber that “the amount of mercury released into the organism by a dental amalgam is very small and well below the threshold at which toxic effects may be observed”. She added: “We know of no proven cases of a patient having suffered mercury intoxication due to dental amalgams.”
Nonetheless, Afssaps recommends that mothers expecting a baby or breast-feeding, and anyone with kidney problems should avoid mercury fillings. “There is no health risk,” says Dr David Siarri, a Paris dentist, but at the same time he admits that he uses “very few dental amalgams and only in certain cases.”
So what are the alternatives to dental amalgams? Chemically neutral ceramic inlays are the best solution, according to the experts. The problem, at least in France, is that public health insurance coverage for this type of treatment is very poor.
The other methods also entail health risks. “More than 40 substances may enter into the composition of alternative materials, which increases the potential risks of compounds causing allergies, mutation, cancers and other disorders,” according to the ADF inhouse magazine. “Resins release free monomers which may attack your gums or dental pulp,” Goldberg says.
“Dental technology is changing very fast. There is a lot of talk about fillings but we need to be careful with all the materials used in dentistry,” says Siarri. So what are we to do? “There is no universal solution,” Goldberg says. “The real priority is to prevent dental decay.”
This article originally appeared in Le Monde