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By Kathleen McGee, Maine
Toxics Action Coalition
Mercury
is an incredibly toxic substance
that has long been known to be a neurotoxin, affecting the
very architecture of the brain, and more recently has been
indicted as an endocrine disrupter as well, causing harm
to the reproductive system.
The long-awaited National Academy of
Science study on mercury told us what environmentalists
have been saying for some time; that it
is far more dangerous than previously thought.
The NAS estimated that at least 60,000
children each year could be at risk for neurological
problems due to mercury exposure.
Further studies continue to raise the
alarm about mercury and the necessity of removing it from
our environment. On March 2 a survey released by the CDC
stated that 10 percent
of
the population,
and possibly higher, have blood levels of mercury that are
dangerous.
Said Kate Mchaffey of the Environmental
Protection Agency, "We don't
consider this to be a trivial finding."
These findings amount to an estimated
375,000 babies a year
at-risk for neurological, and possibly other
problems, not 60,000 as previously estimated.
These are shocking numbers. Another
study just released from Canada last month and published
in the British journal NeuroReport discovered just how neurological
damage occurs from mercury exposure. Studies have shown
blood mercury levels in Alzheimer's patients were more than
twofold higher and as much as threefold higher in early
onset.
"What it really means is that we
need to be far more concerned about sources of mercury exposure,"
said Dr. Lorscheider, a scientist involved with the study.
In 1999 our governor, along with other New England governors
and eastern Canadian premiers, pledged to "virtually"
eliminate mercury with a short-term goal of a 50 percent
reduction by 2003 through emission reduction, as well as
source reduction and safe waste management.
If we ceased all mercury emissions tomorrow,
our fish would still not be safe to eat for decades. The
current estimate of man produced mercury emissions is about
158 tons a year
in the United States.
That estimate comes largely from utility
emissions and municipal and medical waste incinerators.
What the EPA fails to consider in this estimate is a whopping
40 to 60 metric tons
a year of mercury used by the dental industry.
Of that, at least six tons a year are
discharged directly into sewers from dental offices and
no less than eight tons a year are discharged through the
excretion of urine and feces from individuals. This ends
up in our waters and sediments. Sewage treatment plants
cannot meet EPA guidelines for mercury due to individual
excretion of mercury alone. This is augmented further by
cremation when amalgam fillings are present.
The average amalgam filling, which is
50 percent mercury, has more than one-half gram of mercury.
Because of the extreme toxicity of mercury, it
only takes one-half gram to contaminate a 10-acre lake
to the extent that fish consumption advisories would have
to be issued. Multiply that by more than 100 million fillings
a year in the United States alone and that gives you an
idea of the magnitude of the problem.
Mercury vapor, which develops from chewing
action and-or hot liquids or food in the mouth, quickly
and easily crosses the brain barrier and the placenta causing
problems both for an adult and for a developing fetus.
-
Dyslexia
-
ADHD
- ADD
- Retardation
- Autism
and other possible neurological disorders
are all implicated.
As stated by Herbert
Needleman, professor of pediatrics and psychiatry at
the University of Pittsburgh, "We are conducting a
vast toxicological experiment in our society in which our
children and our children's children are the experimental
subjects."
Mercury concentrations start showing
up in amniotic fluid just two days after the placement of
amalgam, and grows in concentration during term, and is
further concentrated and excreted in breast milk. According
to one study in the European Journal of Pediatrics, "Fetal
exposure should be considered when placing amalgam fillings.
The unrestricted application of amalgam for dental restorations
in women before and during the child-bearing age should
be reconsidered."
Oddly, the American Dental Association,
like alchemists of old who tried to turn lead, a highly
toxic substance, into gold, claims that even though mercury
is treated as a hazardous substance when brought into the
dental office, and treated as hazardous waste when it leaves
the dental office, it is somehow and magically safe in the
mouth. How can this be? Very simple. It can't.
Mercury
is toxic. Period.
This is not just a health or environmental
issue, it is economic
as well. D entists
use amalgam fillings because they are "cheap."
However, the use of mercury in any application is never
cheap. The cost of negative health effects to individuals
and insurance companies from mercury exposure is huge.
We can stop exposure from this source
right now. There are safe alternatives and in the long run,
less costly to the whole economically, environmentally and
in quality of life. Furthermore, as scientific evidence
mounts there will be, with almost absolute certainty, an
"avalanche of product liability suits in the future,"
as stated in a letter from attorneys on behalf of the International
Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology to amalgam manufacturers.
In the interest of protecting their citizens, Sweden, Norway,
Germany, Denmark, Austria, Japan, Finland and Canada have
taken steps to limit and phase out the use of amalgam restorations.
California has followed suit. Maine
already has the highest levels of mercury in fish statewide
in the country. We have committed to virtual elimination
of mercury in this state and in the region. We have banned
thermometers in many areas, have take-back programs for
thermostats and mercury switches; hospitals and even car
manufacturers know they must remove mercury from their environments
and products. Maine should take the lead and pass this law,
further protecting our kids and our environment from mercury
exposure.
Maine
Toxics Action Coalition
Kathleen
McGee is director of the Maine Toxics Action Coalition,
which is responsible for posting Maine's waters with fish
consumption advisories (including mercury, dioxin, PCBs
and DDT) statewide.
Related
Articles:
Mercury
Detoxification Protocol
Mercury
Toxicity and Systemic Elimination Agents
Chewing
Gum Releases Mercury From Dental Fillings
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