STUDIES EVALUATE HEALTH EFFECTS OF DENTAL AMALGAM FILLINGS IN CHILDREN

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U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH 
NIH News 
National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR)
http://www.nidcr.nih.gov/

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: Tuesday, April 18, 2006, 4:00 p.m. ET

CONTACT: NIDCR Communications Office, 301-496-4261

STUDIES EVALUATE HEALTH EFFECTS OF DENTAL AMALGAM FILLINGS IN CHILDREN

Scientists supported by the National Institute of Dental and
Craniofacial Research (NIDCR), part of the National Institutes of
Health, report in this week's "Journal of the American Medical
Association" the results of the first-ever randomized clinical trials to
evaluate the safety of placing amalgam fillings, which contain mercury,
in the teeth of children.

Both studies -- one conducted in Europe, the other in the United States
--  independently reached the conclusion: Children whose cavities were
filled with dental amalgam had no adverse health effects. The findings
included no detectable loss of intelligence, memory, coordination,
concentration, nerve conduction, or kidney function during the 5-7 years
the children were followed. The researchers looked for measurable signs
of damage to the brain and kidneys because previous studies with adults
indicated these organs might be especially sensitive to mercury.

The authors noted that children in both studies who received amalgam,
informally known as "silver fillings," had slightly elevated levels of
mercury in their urine. But after several years of analysis, they
determined the mercury levels remained low and did not correlate with
any symptoms of mercury poisoning.

"What's particularly impressive is the strength of the evidence," said
NIDCR director Dr. Lawrence Tabak. "The studies evaluated mercury
exposure in two large, geographically distinct groups of children and
reached similar conclusions about the safety of amalgam."

Dentists have used silver-colored amalgam to fill cavities for more than
150 years. The material is made from an alloy powder of silver, copper,
zinc, and other metals held together like glue by liquid mercury. The
mercury comprises about half the total weight of a filling.

For decades, it was believed that a person's direct exposure to the
mercury in amalgam was brief, occurring only while the dentist packed
the filling into the tooth. But with the arrival of more sensitive
laboratory tools in the late 1970s and into the 1980s, scientists showed
that dental amalgam continuously releases a mercury vapor into the
mouth, which is inhaled and absorbed by the body.

The discovery raised concerns about the possible toxicity of chronic
low-level exposure to mercury from dental amalgam. The toxicity of
mercury at higher levels, such as from industrial exposures, is well
established. Possible symptoms of mercury poisoning include
irritability, memory loss, tremors, poor physical coordination,
insomnia, kidney failure and anorexia.

To help fill gaps in our knowledge about the potential risks of dental
amalgam, the NIDCR began supporting in 1996 the first two safety trials
of amalgam in children. The decision to support the trials stemmed in
part from the fact that millions of children receive amalgam fillings
each year. And yet, nearly all of the available safety data on mercury
exposure involved adults, typically those who worked in environments
where the element is present in relatively large doses, such as dental
offices.

"It was clear that we needed to determine whether the potential risks of
dental amalgam in any way outweigh its benefits, and we needed to make
the determination first in children, who may be more sensitive to any
adverse effects of mercury," said Tabak.

The two studies, whose results are reported this week in "JAMA", are:
the New England study, which was undertaken in the urban Boston, Mass.
area and rural Farmington, Maine, and the Portuguese study, conducted in
Lisbon, Portugal. Each study enrolled over 500 children who had existing
untreated decay in permanent posterior, or back, teeth but no previously
placed dental amalgam fillings. Each child was randomly assigned to
receive either amalgam or composite resin (tooth colored) fillings while
participating in the research studies. All were evaluated for several
years thereafter to determine if any health changes occurred, with
emphases on IQ changes in the New England study and memory,
concentration, coordination, and nerve conduction measures in the
Portuguese study.

"The children received free comprehensive dental care while they
participated in both studies," said Dr. Tim DeRouen, the principal
investigator of the Portuguese study and a scientist at the University
of Washington in Seattle. "These treatments represent the standard of
care for kids with cavities throughout most of the world."

In the Portuguese study, which enrolled children ages eight through 10,
DeRouen and colleagues found no differences over seven years between the
253 participants who received amalgam fillings and the 254 volunteers
who were treated with composites. This conclusion was reached following
annual standardized tests of memory, attention, physical coordination,
and velocity of nerve conduction. Neither did the scientists detect a
pattern of decline in the test scores of individual children who
received amalgam fillings.

DeRouen noted that children who received amalgam fillings had slightly
elevated levels of mercury in their urine, measuring on average 1.5
micrograms per liter of urine for the first two years and leveling off
to 1.0 micrograms per liter or less thereafter. However, these numbers
fall within the so-called "background" level (0-4 micrograms per liter)
that is typical for an average person not exposed to industrial or other
known sources of mercury. A microgram equals one millionth of a gram.

The scientists noted that children in both groups were in great need of
dental care. Among those in the amalgam group, children had on average
10.1 tooth surfaces treated upon entry into the study. By year seven of
the study, they had received on average a total of 18.7 surface
restorations. Each tooth has either four or five defined geographic
surface areas, totaling 128 surfaces in our 32 permanent teeth.

In the New England study, which enrolled children ages six through 10,
the scientists also found after five years no significant differences in
the well being of the 267 participants who randomly received amalgam and
their 267 counterparts who received composite fillings. "We took great
pains to design our study in a way that our tests would be sensitive
enough to detect as little as a three-point drop in IQ," said Dr. Sonja
McKinlay, the principal investigator of the American study and a
scientist at New England Research Institutes in Watertown, Mass. "What
we found over the course of the study is the amalgam fillings had no
adverse effects on the IQ of these children as well as on a range of
other neuropsychological measures and kidney function."

The New England scientists also found that children with amalgam
fillings had increased mercury in their urine. On average, these
children had mercury levels of 1.0 micrograms per liter of urine
compared to an average measure of 0.5 in those who received composite
fillings. Both averages remained within the range of background exposure
and were not related to IQ, other tests of brain function, or kidney
function.

The New England study participants also had fairly rampant tooth decay,
with 9.5 decayed tooth surfaces at the start of the study, of which 1.7
were in permanent teeth. By the end of the study, the children had on
average 15 tooth surfaces restored. In the United States, children
between the age of 6 and 10 have on average only 1.6 decayed surfaces
among both their primary and permanent teeth.

"Given the rigorous nature of the study designs and that both clinical
trials confirmed the other's results, I think these findings should be
reassuring for parents, children, and dental professionals," said
McKinlay.

The National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research
(http://www.nidcr.nih.gov) is the nation's leading funder of research on
oral, dental, and craniofacial health.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) -- "The Nation's Medical
Research Agency" -- includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a
component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the
primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and
translational medical research, and it investigates the causes,
treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more
information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.
  
##
 
This NIH News Release is available online at:
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/apr2006/nidcr-18.htm.

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