|
Part 1 of 2 (Part
2)
Dear Mr. Chairman:
At the April 25th meeting of your committee
I gave testimony that the President of the American Dental
Association (ADA) takes exception to in a letter sent to
you dated 11 May 2001.
Quoting from that letter the testimony
the ADA dislikes is "that elementary mercury from dental
amalgam could work synergistically with other ethyl-mercury
sources and have a cumulative toxic
effect on the body. Dr. Haley postulated that
this could be a potential cause
of autism and Alzheimer's disease."
I stand by my statement as a sensible
concern based on published scientific research regarding
synergist toxicities caused by two very toxic agents, mercury
and the organic mercury compound thimerosal.
This concern is elevated since mercury
exposure from amalgams to a pregnant mother concentrates
in the fetus and a single vaccine given to a six-pound newborn
is the equivalent of giving a 180-pound adult 30 vaccinations
on the same day.
Include in this the toxic effects of
high levels of aluminum and formaldehyde contained in some
vaccines, and the synergist toxicity could be increased
to unknown levels. Further, it is very well known that infants
do not produce significant levels of bile or have adult
renal capacity for several months after birth.
Biliary transport is the major biochemical
route by which mercury is removed from the body, and infants
cannot do this very well. They also do not possess the renal
(kidney) capacity to remove aluminum.
Additionally, mercury
is a well-known inhibitor of kidney function.
Common sense indicates that the concern
I expressed should be taken seriously since we do not know
how combined toxicities effect humans, especially in utero.
Consider the current epidemic death on birth of over 500
foals from apparently healthy mares around Lexington, KY.
These deaths were identified as being
due to a low level toxicity delivered by caterpillars eating
poison plants and later, on migration, depositing their
waste products on grass being eaten by the mares.
The point being it is the infant in
utero that suffered most on exposure to low level, toxins,
not the mother. Combined mercury toxicities can be devastating
as I reference below and in the many references available
on the www.altcorp.com
website.
What is needed is research by non-biased
scientists to clarify this, something our FDA and NIDCR
have refused to do. As the American public find out what
has happened regarding this issue, they will be quite angry.
This is a biomedical science issue that should have been
resolved a long time ago by the responsible federal agencies.
Below I present detailed and referenced
information supporting my case and respond to various statements
made by the ADA President that I believe to be misleading
and sometimes flagrantly wrong. The ADA seems to think it
has the right to select which research it believes and to
trash that research that says it is wrong, even though the
latter represents the bulk of published research.
To address the issues raised by the
ADA President in his letter I will go in sequential order
of the comments made in the letter placing the ADA comments
in italics and providing scientific references for my conclusions.
"There is no scientifically valid
evidence linking either autism or Alzheimer's disease with
dental amalgam". First, mercury
is a well-known, potent neurotoxicant, and common
sense would lead to the conclusion that severe neurotoxins
would exacerbate all neurological disorders, including Parkinson's,
ALS, MS, autism and AD. Several research papers in refereed,
high quality journals and scientific publications have shown
that mercury inhibits the same enzymes in normal brain tissues
as are inhibited in AD brain samples (1a-c, 2, 3).
AD is pathologically confirmed post-mortem
by the appearance of neuro-fibillary tangles (NFTs) and
amyloid plaques in brain tissue.
Published research, within the past
year, has shown that exposure of neurons in culture to sub-lethal
doses of mercury (much less than is observed in human brain
tissue) causes the formation of NFTs (4), the increased
secretion of amyloid protein and the hyper-phosphorylation
of a protein called Tau (5).
All three of these
mercury-induced aberrances are regularly identified as the
major diagnostic markers for AD.
In the manuscript published in the J.
of Neurochemistry (5) the authors state "These results
indicate that mercury may play a role in the patho-physiological
mechanisms of AD." In most of these experiments, mercury
and only mercury among the several toxic heavy metals tested,
caused the AD related responses reported.
Many medically trained individuals would
agree that if something causes the appearance of the pathological
hallmarks confirming the disease then it likely causes the
disease. I at least have limited my claims to exacerbation
of these diseases to err on the side of caution.
Further, consider this about AD. A study
of 500 sets of identical twins from World War II era lead
to the conclusion that sporadic AD which represents 90%
of the cases was not a directly inherited disease. In many
cases one twin would get AD and the other would not. Genetic
susceptibility is involved, but a toxic exposure is required
(e.g., if you are genetically susceptible to being an alcoholic
you still need to be exposed to alcohol to become one).
The work by Rose's group at Johns Hopkins
University implicates APO-E genotype as a "risk"
factor with APO-E2 being protective and APO-E4 being a major
risk factor. APO-E2 has the ability to protect the brain
from mercury by having two additional thiol-groups to bind
mercury appearing in the cerebrospinal fluid whereas APO-E4
does not have this additional capability (1). This may explain
the proven genetic susceptibility to AD of the APO-E4 carriers.
NIH has spent hundreds of millions of
dollars to find a causal factor for AD. Yet, no virus, yeast
or bacteria has been identified so the cause remains unknown
to general science. The rate of AD per 1,000 population
is nearly the same in California, Michigan, Maine, North
Carolina, Florida, Texas, etc. It is not significantly different
for rural versus urban individuals, or factory workers versus
those with outside jobs.
So the primary toxicant
that may be involved is most likely not environmental.
Therefore, it must be a very personal
toxicant, like what you put in your mouth. Since we place
grams of a neurotoxic metal, mercury, in our mouths in the
form of dental amalgam this makes it a good suspect for
the exacerbation of AD -- -not that all would be affected,
just those that are genetically susceptible, or those who
become ill enough to fall prey to the toxicity, or those
that are also exposed to another synergistic toxin (see
below).
The one fact that ties mercury into
a major suspect for AD is the fact that most of the proteins/enzymes
that are inhibited in AD brain are thiol-sensitive enzymes.
Mercury is one of the most potent chemical
inhibitors of thiol-sensitive enzymes and mercury vapor
easily penetrates into the central nervous system (2). Mercury
is not the only toxicant to inhibit thiol-sensitive enzymes.
Thimerosal and lead will do this also as well as reactive
oxygen compounds created in oxidative stress and many other
industrial compounds.
However, mercury has been reported to
be significantly elevated in AD brain (14a,b, 15). Mercury
is in many mouths being emitted from dental amalgam and
absolutely would exacerbate the clinical condition identified
as AD. Therefore, mercury should be considered as a causal
contributor since mercury can produce the two pathological
hallmarks of the disease and inhibits the same thiol-sensitive
enzymes that are dramatically inhibited in AD brain.
It is documented by a 1991 World Health
Organization report that dental
amalgams constitute the major human exposure to mercury.
Grams of mercury are in the mouths of
individuals with several amalgam fillings. Further, the
level of blood and urine mercury positively correlates with
the number of amalgam fillings. This was confirmed by a
recently published NIH funded study (6). Therefore, I fail
to see the ADA's viewpoint that there is no scientifically
valid evidence linking mercury from amalgams to exacerbating
AD, especially since mercury produces the diagnostic hallmarks
of AD (4,5).
The ADA hides behind the fact that there
has not been an epidemiological study to attempt to correlate
mercury exposure and AD. However, absence of proof is not
proof of absence. This also begs the question why the ADA,
the FDA and the National Institutes of Dental Craniofacial
Research (NIDCR) have not pushed for such a study? These
agencies know this would be immensely expensive and only
the U.S. government could afford to support any reliable
long-term study.
Yet, these same responsible agencies
have failed to confirm as safe the placing into the mouth
of Americans grams of the most toxic heavy metal Americans
are exposed to.
The dental branch
of the FDA has steadfastly refused to investigate the toxic
potential of dental amalgam.
Look at the references in the ADA letter!
Even they must quote Scandinavian literature
to support their contentions of safety, and even then they
have to reference papers on fertility instead of neurotoxicity!
Where is the ADA, FDA and NIDCR supported U.S. research
in this area? Go to the NIH web-sites and look for research
on the safety of mercury from amalgams, or try to find an
NIH study concerning possible mercury involvement in any
common neurological diseases.
NIH does support research on methyl-mercury,
as we seem to like beating up on the fishing industry whilst
leaving the dental industry alone. However, according to
the NIH study about 90% of the mercury in our bodies is
elemental mercury, not methyl-mercury, showing the exposure
is more likely from dental amalgams rather than fish
(6). Support at NIH has been very sparse for investigating
the relationship of elemental mercury exposure to neurological
diseases.
"And there is no scientifically
valid evidence demonstrating in vivo transformation of inorganic
mercury into organo mercury species in individuals occupationally
exposed to amalgam mercury vapor".
There was a paper published entitled
"Methylation of Mercury from Dental Amalgam and Mercuric
Chloride by Oral Streptococci in vitro" (19). This
strongly indicates that "organo mercury species"
are indeed capable of being made in the human body and may
explain the appearance of methyl-mercury in the blood and
urine of individuals who don't eat seafood.
Further, periodontal disease is considered
one of the major risk factors for stroke, heart and cardiovascular
disease and late onset, insulin independent diabetes. Many
studies of the toxicants produced in periodontal disease
have identified hydrogen sulfide (H2S) and methane-thiol
(CH3SH) as major toxic products of infective anerobic bacteria
in the mouth metabolizing the amino acids cysteine and methionine,
respectively.
These volatile thiol-compounds are what
cause bad-breath! Methane-thiol (CH3SH) would react immediately
and spontaneously in the mouth with amalgam generated mercury
cation to produce the following two compounds, CH3S-HgCl
and CH3S-Hg-SCH3, which are organo-mercurial compounds (check
this out with any competent chemist). They are also very
similar in structure to methyl-mercury (CH3-HgCl) and dimethyl-mercury
(CH3-Hg-CH3), the latter which caused the highly publicized
death of a University of Dartmouth chemistry professor 10
months after she spilled two drops on her gloved hand.
We have synthesized CH3S-HgCl and CH3-Hg-CH3
in my laboratory and tested their toxicity in comparison
to Hg2+. As expected, they were both more toxic than Hg2+
and this data is available on the www.altcorp.com
web-site. Therefore, the ADA President is badly misinformed
on this issue. Additionally, I am amazed that the researchers
at the ADA and NIDCR did not previously report on this obvious
chemistry as I would imagine this is the kind of topic they
should be addressing.
"Based on currently available scientific
evidence, the ADA believes that dental amalgam is a safe,
affordable and durable material for all but a handful of
individuals who are allergic to one of its components. It
contains a mixture of metals such as silver, copper and
tin, in addition to mercury, which chemically binds these
components into a hard, stable and safe substance."
This is a totally wrong statement unless
you underline the "ADA believes" and define how
big is a "handful of individuals". Sensible people
want "believes" replaced with "knows"
and a "handful" replaced with a "hard number".
Amalgams emit dangerous
levels of mercury and the
ADA absolutely refuses to accept this fact or even to study
the possibility. Otherwise, the ADA administrators seem
to be unable to separate fact from fiction. Consider, if
they wanted to destroy my argument on amalgam toxicity they
would reference several solid, refereed publication showing
that mercury is not emitted from dental amalgams -- -but
they cannot do this with even one article.
They always state the "estimate"
is that a very, very, very small amount. Competent, well-informed
researchers don't use the evasive
language used in the ADA President's letter.
They would state the amount is so many micrograms mercury
released per centimeter squared amalgam surface area and
a "handful of individuals" would be a percentage
of our population! Lets look at the published literature.
First, careful evaluation of the amount
of mercury emitted from a commonly used dental amalgam in
a test tube with 10 ml of water was presented in an article
entitled "Long-term Dissolution of Mercury from a Non-Mercury-Releasing
Amalgam". This study showed that "the over-all
mean release of mercury was 43.5 ± 3.2 micrograms
per cm2/day, and the amount remained fairly constant during
the duration of the experiments (2 years)" (7).
This was without pressure, heat or galvanism
as would have occurred if the amalgams were in a human mouth.
Further, research where amalgams containing radioactive
mercury were placed in sheep and monkeys, showed the radioactivity
collecting in all body tissues and especially high in the
jaw and facial bones. (8,9).
Another publication, from a major U.S.
School of Dentistry, stated that solutions in which amalgams
had been soaked were "severely cytotoxic initially
when Zn release was highest" (13). Zn is a needed element
for body health and is found in very low percentages in
dental amalgams when compared to mercury and why mercury
was not mentioned in the abstract of this publication baffles
me. Why would the statement be true? Because Zn2+ is a synergist
that enhances mercury toxicity!
However, does this sound like amalgams
are a safe, stable material? We have repeated similar amalgam
soaking experiments in my laboratory and the results can
be seen at www.altcorp.com.
Cadmium (from smoking), lead, zinc and other heavy metals
enhanced mercury toxicity as expected (this research is
currently being prepared for publication).
The ADA claim that
a zinc oxide layer is formed on the amalgams that decreases
mercury release is true, if you don't use the teeth.
The zinc oxide layer would be easily
removed by slight abrasion such as chewing food or brushing
the teeth. Further, my laboratory has confirmed that solutions
in which amalgams have been soaked can cause the inhibition
of brain proteins that are inhibited by adding mercury chloride,
and these are the same enzymes inhibited in AD brain samples.
Further, mercury emitting from a dental
amalgam can be easily detected using the same mercury vapor
analysis instrument used by OSHA and the EPA to monitor
mercury levels.
Anyone who does not
believe mercury is emitted from amalgams should consider
doing the following.
Have your local dentist make 10 amalgams
using the same material he/she places in your mouth. Take
these 10 amalgams to your nearest research university's
department of chemistry or toxicology department and have
them determine how much mercury is being emitted. For example,
have them calculate how long it would take a single spill
of hardened amalgam to make a gallon of water too toxic
to pass EPA standards as drinking water.
You will then have an answer from an
unbiased, solid group of scientists who are trained to do
such determinations. Also, remember the level of mercury
they measure would not include the increase that would occur
with amalgams in the mouth where chewing, grinding your
teeth, drinking hot liquids and galvanism greatly increase
the release of mercury. Since this approach can be easily
done by anyone don't you think the ADA, FDA and other amalgam
supporters would have this published by now if the level
of mercury released was below the danger level?
Here is their attempt.
According to an ADA spokesman he has
"estimated" that only 0.08 micrograms of mercury
per amalgam per day is taken into the human body. Applying
simple math to this "estimate" of 0.08 micrograms/
day one would divide this amount by 8,640 (24 hours/day
X 60 minutes/hour X 6 ten second intervals/minute) to determine
the amount of mercury in micrograms available for a ten
second mercury vapor analysis.
Consider that somewhere between one-half
to five-sixths of the mercury released would be into the
tooth (that area of the amalgam that exists below the visibly
exposed amalgam surface) and not into the oral air. In addition,
some mercury in the oral air would be rapidly absorbed into
the saliva and oral mucosa (mercury loves hydrophobic cell
membranes) and also not be measured by the mercury analyzer.
Further, as the mercury analyzer pulls
mercury containing oral air into the analysis chamber, mercury
free ambient air rushes into the oral cavity decreasing
the mercury concentration. Taking all of this into account
you can calculate that most mercury analyzers could not
detect this "estimated" 0.08 micrograms/day level
of mercury even if you had several amalgams.
However, the fact is that it is quite
easy to detect mercury emitting from one amalgam using these
analyzers. Therefore, the "estimate" by this ADA
spokesman is way to low.
Also, if you gently rub the amalgam
with a tooth-brush the amount of mercury emitted goes up
dramatically. This is a test anyone can do and demonstrate
to any group. The ADA spokesmen state that the mercury vapor
analyzer is not accurate at determining oral mercury levels
and they are quite correct.
However, using this instrument would
greatly underestimate the amount of mercury exiting the
amalgam. The very fact that the mercury analyzer detects
high levels of oral mercury strongly indicates the emitted
amount of mercury is too high to be acceptable.
Mercury release from dental amalgams
is also the reason OSHA has used this analyzer to make the
dentists place unused amalgam in a sealed container under
liquid glycerin. This is done so that the mercury vapors
from the amalgams will not contaminate the dental office
making it an unsafe place to work.
This is also the reason the EPA insists
that removed amalgam filling and extracted teeth containing
amalgam material be picked up and disposed of as toxic
waste. Apparently, the only safe place for amalgams
is in the human mouth if you believe what the ADA believes.
"Amalgams have been used for 150
years and, during that time, has established an extensively
reviewed record of safety and effectiveness."
First, what other aspect of industry
or medicine is still using the same basic manufactured material
that they used 150 years ago? One has to ask the question
as to what has hindered the progress
of development of better and safer dental materials?
Also, consider that in the early 1900s
the average life expectancy of most Americans was about
50 years of age and most of them could not afford dental
fillings.
Fifty to sixty years is much less than
the average age of onset of AD. Further, amalgams became
more available to most working class Americans after World
War II, or in the early 1950s. The greatest increase in
the use of amalgam occurred at about this time and these
'baby boomers are the great ongoing amalgam experiment'.
They are now reaching the age where
AD appears and have lived most of their lives carrying amalgam
fillings. They also wonder what is causing their chronic
fatigue as the physicians can find nothing systemically
wrong with them. I would encourage all concerned to contact
the health experts on the rate of increase of AD in the
U.S.A. at this time.
Consider the cost it will place on the
taxpayer and how much we would save if we could even remove
the exacerbation factors that might speed up the onset of
AD. I must point out that the "extensively reviewed
record of safety" mentioned in the ADA letter was mostly
done by dentists and committees dominated by ADA dentists.
Also, much of the "safety opinion"
was developed long before words like Alzheimer's disease
and chronic fatigue were commonplace. Further, these were
"reviews" and not carefully documented studies
based on scientific experimentation and done by unqualified
dentists, not medical scientists. Dentists are not trained
to do basic research, nor are they trained in toxicology.
Furthermore, the ADA does have a vested
interest in keeping amalgam use legitimate. The ADA was
founded on using amalgam technology and participated in
patenting and licensing amalgam technology. One has to question
why there has not been a general outcry by the bulk of well-meaning
dentists and their patients and this question should be
addressed.
The International Association of Oral
Medicine and Toxicology, started by American & Canadian
dentists, does adamantly disagree with the ADA on the issue
of safety of dental amalgams and this organization has the
mantra of "Show me your science" with regards
to all dental issues.
Part
2
|