FDA Cracks the Amalgam Filling Cabal
Date:
6/23/2008
Posted By: Jon Barron
For years, the FDA has marched arm in arm with the American
Dental Association and unflinchingly maintained the joint
position that mercury fillings are perfectly safe, despite ever
increasing evidence to the contrary. But on June 3rd, they
finally broke ranks. However, before you give a big round of
applause to the FDA, understand that their statement was not
voluntary. It resulted from the settlement of a lawsuit brought
by the
Mercury
Policy Project,
Mom's
Against Mercury,
Consumers
for Dental Choice, et al. And although the
statement itself was weak and highly qualified, it certainly
represents a breaking of the ranks, and it absolutely signals
the beginning of the end for amalgam fillings -- even if the ADA
can't see it yet.
The Lawsuit and the FDA

On
June 3rd, the FDA
posted
an announcement on its website warning that
mercury-based amalgam fillings "may" pose a safety
risk for pregnant women and young children. The FDA posted this
precaution on its Website as the result of a settlement of the
lawsuit I mentioned above. Also, as I mentioned earlier, the
warning is not strong; it's highly qualified; and it limits
itself to two groups, pregnant women and children, both of which
are already
urged
to limit their mercury intake from seafood
because of concerns that too much mercury can harm developing
brains. Entertainingly,
the
FDA also recommends that "women and
young children, in particular, should
include
fish or shellfish in their diets due to their many nutritional
benefits." Whoever said FDA policy needs to be consistent?
The announcement then goes on to say that the FDA "will
examine evidence concerning whether the release of mercury vapor
[released in the act of chewing food] can cause health problems,
including neurological disorders in children and fetuses."
In their announcement the FDA also mentioned that in 2002, they
had published a "proposed" rule to classify dental
amalgam as a class II device with special controls. They then
went on to say that on April 28, 2008, they had reopened the
comment period for that proposed rule -- six years later, mind
you. Additional controls under consideration include warnings to
alert consumers of the mercury in amalgams before having
cavities filled and/or restricting mercury-containing amalgam
fillings in small children and certain other patients. The FDA
is accepting public comments until July 28 with a final ruling
expected a year from now, by July 28, 2009. Again, this is not
voluntary. The FDA is taking these actions because they were
imposed on them as part of the settlement of the Mom's Against
Mercury lawsuit -- not out of a suddenly enlightened vision.
"
It's
an open question what we will do," FDA
Deputy Commissioner Randall Lutter told The Associated Press;
however, "what this says is there's a clear intent on our
part on labeling for sensitive subpopulations." Certainly a
mixed message!
On the other hand, Michael Bender of the Mercury Policy Project
called the settlement "a watershed moment." And
Charles Brown, an attorney for Consumers for Dental Choice said,
"This court settlement signals the death knell for mercury
fillings."
The American Dental Association disagree
Not surprisingly,
the
ADA disagrees. �In summary, the ADA's
position is that the FDA settlement changes nothing. It merely
sets a definite deadline (July 28, 2009) for the FDA to complete
the reclassification process for amalgam fillings that it
started in 2002. As far as the ADA is concerned the FDA has in
no way changed its approach to, or position on, amalgam
fillings. As they point out, the FDA is not calling for
restrictions on the use of amalgam in any particular group. They
are merely restating their concerns and have set a timetable for
evaluating those concerns.
Also, not surprisingly, the ADA then dredged up a number of
studies that support their position that despite the fact that
mercury has long been linked to brain and kidney damage at
certain levels, children with amalgam fillings do not experience
adverse effects related to neurobehavioral, IQ, and kidney
function compared to those with composite fillings. The ADA
believes these studies support the existing scientific
understanding that the minute amount of mercury released by
amalgam does not adversely affect children's health.
Mercury fillings
So what is the truth about mercury fillings? Are they safe, or
not?
As I detailed in
Lessons
from the Miracle Doctors, the American
Dental Association has resolutely maintained for years that
"when mercury is combined with the metals used in dental
amalgam, its toxic properties are made harmless." If this
were true, it would be miraculously fortuitous. Amalgam, which
consists of mercury, silver, tin, copper, and a trace amount of
zinc, has been used by dentists for hundreds of years -- as far
back, actually, as the 7th century in China. In the United
States, mercury-based fillings made their appearance in the
early 1800s.
From the beginning, there were a number of dentists who were
concerned by the presence of mercury, since by that time it was
fairly well known that mercury was poisonous. In fact, these
concerns were so strong that by the mid-1940s several dental
societies, including the American Society of Dental Surgeons,
had joined together to stop the use of amalgam fillings. But
amalgam was just too easy to work with, and whatever ill effects
people experienced were too far down the road to matter. So, in
1859, the American Dental Association (ADA) was founded
primarily to promote the use of mercury amalgam as a safe and
desirable tooth filling material. (Not surprising, then,
that the ADA has continued to support amalgam fillings no matter
the evidence.) There were no tests done at the time. Amalgam was
promoted because it was easy to work with. The reason the
mercury was used was because it serves to "dissolve"
the other metals and make a homogenous whole.

It
would be miraculous indeed if you could arbitrarily use one of
the most toxic substances in existence with no ill effect. In
fact, as a toxic metal, mercury ranks just behind plutonium! So
how did the ADA defend its use of such a highly toxic substance
in your mouth? Well, the early position was that the mercury
reacts with the other metals to form a "biologically
inactive substance" so that none of it ever makes its way
into your body. This was an interesting theory that, of course,
turned out not to be true. Numerous studies conducted in the
1970s and 1980s proved
conclusively that the
mercury from fillings (primarily from mercury vapor created when
we chew) makes its way into the body, ending up in your lungs,
heart, stomach, kidneys, endocrine glands, gastrointestinal
tract, jaw tissue, and our brains. In effect, the denser the
tissue, the greater the concentration of mercury.
There have been over 12,000 papers published to date elucidating
the dangers of amalgam fillings, but the most compelling of
those studies detailed the use of radioactively tagged amalgam
fillings in a controlled experiment. In less than thirty days,
substantial levels of the tagged mercury was found throughout
the body and brain, especially in the liver and kidneys. Studies
have shown that within a month of receiving amalgam fillings,
kidney
function is reduced by well over 50 percent.
Once it became irrefutable that mercury from the fillings was
ending up in our bodies, it then became mandatory for the ADA to
find a new theory/defense. Again, not based on clinical studies
but rather on convenience, it became the position of the ADA
that, yes, perhaps some mercury does make its way into the body,
but at levels that are so low it has no effect on our health.
Without batting an eye, the FDA also adopted the new position
with no noticeable debate or research. And once again, it would
be miraculous indeed if that were true. Unfortunately, it is
not. Like so many other toxic substances, the real problem with
mercury is that it is a cumulative poison and the body holds
onto a significant percentage of the mercury that enters it. In
fact, mercury does not easily "metabolize" and pass
out of the body. It remains for years and years locked to body
tissue. If you want to get rid of it, you have to
chelate
it out.
So mercury is one of the most toxic metals known -- even more
toxic than lead, second to plutonium. And while there is no
"conclusive" evidence that the mercury from fillings
causes any particular health problems, there are a number of
studies that imply such a relationship. There is strong evidence
that mercury lowers T-cell (white blood cells) counts. A number
of studies have shown removing amalgam fillings can cause T-cell
counts to rise anywhere from 50 to 300 percent. This, alone,
implicates amalgam fillings in cancer, autoimmune diseases,
allergies, Candida overgrowth, and multiple sclerosis (mercury
levels in MS patients are, on average, 7.5 times higher than
normal). In fact, there have been several studies that have
shown that white blood cell abnormalities, such as found in
leukemia patients, tend to normalize when amalgam fillings are
removed.
It has also been shown that mercury interferes with the ability
of the blood to carry oxygen -- actually cutting its
oxygen-carrying capabilities by half. This would account for
many instances of chronic fatigue syndrome. Mercury also has an
affinity for our brains and, as already mentioned, is implicated
in brain tumors and dementia. The famous "mad hatters"
of England were actually hat makers who worked with mercury and
eventually went insane. Finally, mercury has an affinity for
fetal tissue -- reaching higher levels in the fetus than in the
mother herself -- which accounts for mercury's implication in
birth defects.
What about other sources of mercury entering the body? Well,
seafood is, of course, a source, and some other foods we eat are
too. But the amount of mercury entering our bodies from amalgam
fillings represents anywhere from 50 to 90 percent of the total
amount! Each amalgam filling in your mouth pumps, on
average, some 3,000,000,000,000,000 mercury atoms into your body
every day.
So why in the world does the ADA continue to support the use of
amalgam fillings? One simple answer is: if you're in for an
inch, you're in for a mile (or as the English like to say,
"In for a penny, in for a pound"). What would the
legal ramifications be if the ADA suddenly announced that they,
and all the dentists connected with them, had been wrong for
well over 100 years and had been slowly poisoning all Americans,
Canadians (the Canadian Dental Association touts the same line),
or whatever?
So why does a weenified
FDA announcement mark the beginning of the end for amalgam
fillings?

Until
this point in time, when it came to amalgam fillings, the FDA
and the ADA marched in lock-step. As already mentioned, their
position was that:
- Mercury was locked in the filling and couldn't escape
- And then later, that although some escaped, it wasn't enough
to harm you.
In order for those positions to be tenable, they had to be
maintained fanatically. The FDA's new statement, whether they
mean it to or not, represents a tectonic shift in the landscape.
It totally negates their previous positions. It doesn't matter
that the new statement may be qualified, or that it is
restricted to infants and pregnant women. It doesn't matter,
because what it does do is open the door -- even if just a
crack. What it says is that, yes, to some degree the mercury in
fillings presents a threat. We now need to figure out exactly
what that threat is, but after a hundred years of denial, we
finally acknowledge that there is a threat.
To look at it another way, it's a bit like the old joke:
Would you sleep with me for a million dollars?
For a million dollars, yes I would?
Okay, I'll give you a dollar. Let's go to bed.
I thought you were going to give me a million dollars?
That was just to determine what you were. Now that we both
know what that is, we're just negotiating the price.
And so it is with the latest FDA announcement. They've opened
the door. If amalgam fillings are dangerous for infants, then
what about toddlers? If they're dangerous for pregnant women,
then what about people with compromised immune systems? Or what
about the elderly? Once the door opens, even if it's just a
crack, anything is possible. And besides, as everyone knows, a
class action lawyer can squeeze his ethics through a crack so
small you can't even get an intelligent thought through it. But
given a real opening and a legitimate case, the sky's the limit.
Bottom line: the FDA's announcement marks the beginning of the
end for amalgam fillings -- despite what the ADA may say. It may
take a year. It may take ten, but the writing is on the wall.
And besides, it's not like there aren't alternatives. For just
$50 more a filling, you can get a composite resin filling that
actually binds with the tooth, makes it stronger, and even looks
like a natural part of your mouth.
In the meantime, if you have mercury fillings, you probably want
to be doing regular (twice a year)
heavy
metal detoxes to clean the ever accumulating
mercury out of your body.
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