Dr. Boyd Haley is a professor and chair of the chemistry department at the University of Kentucky. In this interview, Dr. Haley
discusses mercury toxicity as a causal factor in Autism. He also discusses the two primary sources of mercury toxicity: vaccines
& dental amalgams.
*Comments*
”Thank you Dr. Haley for your dedication to uncovering the Thimerosal scandal.
Dr. Haley for all of the research and time he's put into getting to the truth.
Dr. Haley has always been so kind and generous. Thank you for standing strong and helping so many families.
Moms on a mission for Autism
Dr. Boyd Haley Exposes the Phony Science on Amalgam "Safety"
December 13th 2004
The stories have been whirling in the news when a report was issued from top
government agencies stating that amalgam was "safe." Read one news report from
WebMd entitled "Mercury Dental Fillings Do Not Pose Health Risk", but don't
forget to read Dr. Boyd Haley's expose´ that shows how their report was based on
phony science.
Dr. Boyd Haley, Chair and Professor of the Chemistry Department at the
University of Kentucky says, "This article, and the supporting comments by panel
members and dentists, represents an intellectual travesty and an ethical failure
of the government and dental agencies whose assignment is to protect Americans,
especially American children, from exposure to neurotoxins."
To read Dr. Haley's full review of the government report as reported in in the
WebMD newspaper article "Mercury Dental Fillings Do Not Pose Health Risk," click
here.
Leo Cashman, Excutive Director of DAMS released a statement about the LSRO report. LSRO Report, Fact or Fraud?
America's top mercury Scientist, Boyd Haley, P.h.D. on mercury amalgam fillings:"Arguing about the safety of mercury/silver
amalgam with dentists is like arguing with the town drunk."
"I mean I'm testifying trying to get mercury out of certain states, and you'll
hear these people make comments comparing a dental amalgam to table salt. Then
you look at it and you say, this is what I mean by arguing with the town drunk.
That is completely absurd logic and it shows that they don't know an iota of
chemistry or they're desperately trying to find something to deceive the
American people to make them think they're right."
Dr. Boyd Haley refutes ADA in congressional testimony
The following excerpts are taken from a rebuttal of the ADA's response in a letter they sent to Congress on May 11, 2001
The ADA says: "There is no scientifically valid evidence linking either autism or Alzheimer's disease with dental amalgam".
Dr. Haley responds: 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 Parkin- son'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.... 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, the increased secretion of amyloid
protein and the hyper-phosphorylation of a protein called Tau.
All three of these mercury-induced aberrances are regularly identified as the
major diagnostic markers for AD.
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. 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....
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.
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.... 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.
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. Support at NIH has been very sparse for investigating
the relationship of elemental mercury exposure to neurological diseases.
The ADA says: "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".
Dr. Haley says: There was a paper published entitled "Methylation of Mercury
from Dental Amalgam and Mercuric Chloride by Oral Streptococci in vitro". 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.
The ADA says: "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."
Dr. Haley says: 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! Let's 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
+ or - 3.2 micrograms per cm2/day, and the amount remained fairly constant
during the duration of the experiments (2 years)".
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.
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" 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 under-estimate 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.
The ADA says: "Amalgams have been used for 150 years and, during that time, has
established an extensively reviewed record of safety and effectiveness."
Dr. Haley says: 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.
The ADA, through state dental boards stacked with ADA members, has instigated a
"gag order" preventing dentists from even mentioning to their patients that
amalgams are 50% mercury. Dentists cannot state that mercury is neurotoxic and
emits from amalgams and that the dental patient should consider this as they
select the tooth filling material they want used.
If a dentist informs a patient of these very truthful facts he will be consider
not to be practicing good dentistry and his license will be in jeopardy.
Attacking a person's freedom of speech because he is telling the truth and
causing serious questions to be asked about the protocols pushed by a
bureaucracy (the ADA) makes me seriously question the commitment the ADA has for
the health of the American people.
The negative stand taken by many state dental boards against even informing the
patients about the mercury content of amalgams and the other filling choices
they have does not speak well for the organized dental profession. What medical
group would give a treatment to a patient without telling them of the risks
involved?
The ADA says: "Issued late in 1997, the FDI World Dental Federation and the
World Health Organization consensus statement on dental amalgam stated "No
controlled studies have been published demonstrating systemic adverse effects
from amalgam restorations."
Dr Haley says: My first comment would be to question, "who staffed these
committees and what percentage were connected to the ADA though the NIDCR or the
FDA dental materials branch or other relationships?" We appear to have the foxes
guarding the henhouse! Then I would again point out that "absence of proof is
not proof of absence".
I would then ask 'have any controlled studies been done and if not, why not?' If
the ADA dentists insist on placing amalgams in the mouth, are they not required
to show it is safe, not the other way around?
Should not the ADA and others concerned push to require the FDA to prove
amalgams are safe instead of totally ducking this issue. Go to the FDA dental
materials web- site and try to find any evaluation of amalgam safety — you will
not succeed. The dental branch of the FDA refuses to do a safety study on
amalgams and this is shame on our government.
The ADA says: "the small amount of mercury released from amalgam restorations,
especially during placement and removal, has not been shown to cause any adverse
effects."
Dr. Haley says: This increase in mercury exposure has also not been shown to be
safe by proving it does not cause any adverse effects!
Are we to believe this elevated exposure to a toxic metal is good for us?
If one were in a building that caused the rise in blood/urine mercury that
appears after dental amalgam removal, then OSHA would shut the building down.
In fact, no study by the ADA or NIDCR has been completed that specifically and
accurately addresses this issue. Yet, the ADA leads us to believe that
additional exposure to toxic mercury from these procedures is not dangerous to
our health.
Mercury toxicity is a retention toxicity that builds up during years of
exposure. The toxicity of a singular level of mercury is greatly increased by
current or subsequent, low exposures to lead or other toxic heavy metals. ....
Therefore, the damage caused by amalgams could occur years after initial
placement and at mercury levels now deemed safe by the ADA.
Our ability to protect ourselves from the toxic damage caused by exposure to
mercury depends on the level of protective natural biochemical compounds (e.g.
glutathione, metallothionine) in our cells and the levels of these protecting
agents is dependent upon our health and age.
If we become ill, or as we age, the cellular levels of glutathione drop and our
protection against the toxic effects of mercury decreases and damage will be
done.
This is strongly supported by numerous studies where rodents have been
chemically treated to decrease their cellular levels of protective glutathione
and then treated with mercury, always with dramatic injurious effects when
compared to controls. Therefore, published science indicates that mercury
toxicity is much more pronounced in infants, the very old and the very ill.
A recent NIH study on 1127 military men showed the major contributor to human
mercury body burden was dental amalgams. The amount of mercury in the urine
increased about 4.5 fold in soldiers with the average number of amalgams versus
the controls with no amalgams.
In extreme cases it was over 8 fold higher. Since the total mercury included
that from diet and industrial pollution are we to expect that this 4.5 to 8 fold
average increase in mercury is not detrimental to our health? Does this indicate
that amalgams are a "safe and effective restorative material"? Is the public and
Congress expected to be so naive as to believe that increased exposure above
environmental exposure levels is not damaging?
Then why are pregnant mothers told to limit seafood intake when mercury exposure
from amalgams is much greater? Then why is the EPA pushing regulations to force
the chloro-alkali plants and fossil fuel plants to clean up their mercury
contributions to our environment?
Obviously, from this study most of the human exposure to mercury is from dental
amalgams, not fossil fuel plants. Yet, the FDA lets the dental profession
continue to expose American citizens to even greater amounts of mercury. They do
this by refusing to test amalgam fillings as a source of mercury exposure. Also,
remember that the amalgam using ADA dentists are a major contributor to mercury
in our water and air through mercury leaving the dental offices, and even when
we are cremated.
The ADA says: "The ADA's Council on Scientific Affairs 1998 report on its review
of the recent scientific literature on amalgam states: "The Council concludes
that, based on available scientific information, amalgam continues to be a safe
and effective restorative material." and "There currently appears to be no
justification for discontinuing the use of dental amalgam."
Dr. Haley says: What would you expect an ADA Council to say? The ADA, as
evidenced in the current letter by the President of the ADA, only quotes and
considers valid the published research that supports their desire to continue
placing mercury containing amalgam fillings in American citizens. When were
dentists trained to evaluate neurological and toxicological data and
manuscripts?
What is needed is an international conference where both the pro- and
anti-amalgam researchers show up and present their data in front of a
world-class scientific committee. I would challenge the ADA to line up their
scientists and supporters to participate in such a conference. This could be
held in Washington, D.C. so the FDA officials could easily attend. Perhaps we
could persuade the FDA to sponsor such a conference.
However, this is unlikely since a recent written request to have a conference to
evaluate the safety of amalgams was rejected in a letter from the FDA and signed
by three FDA/ADA dentists who presented the ADA line on this issue. Doesn't it
seem a bit fraudulent to have FDA/ADA dentists deciding on whether or not a
safety study should be done on mercury emitting amalgams being placed in human
mouths with the blessing of the ADA? This does seem like a conflict in interest
that Congress should address.
"In an article published in the February 1999 issue of the Journal of the
American Dental Association, researchers report finding "no significant
association of Alzheimer's disease with the number, surface area or history of
having dental amalgam restorations."
This research was lead by a dentist, Dr. Sax. It was submitted to the J. of the
American Medical Association and rejected. It was then submitted to the New
England Journal of Medicine and rejected. It was then published in the ADA trade
journal, JADA, that is not a refereed, scientific journal. JADA is loaded with
commercial advertisements for dental products.
They even called a "press conference" announcing the release of this article!
Calling a press conference for a twice-rejected publication that is to appear in
a trade journal is playing politics with science at its worst!
At this press conference two of the authors made unbelievable statements that
were not supported by any of the data in the article and conflicted with
numerous major scientific reports, including the 1998 NIH study. .... Some of
these were high-lighted in the side-bars of the ADA publication.
I would suggest that those concerned with this article visit Medline and look at
the publication records of the two individuals who made these statements. Also,
look at the three earlier excellent publications in refereed journals by some of
the other authors showing significant mercury levels in the brains of AD
subjects compared to controls. .... However, put a dentist in charge of the
project and the data gets reversed!
Apply some common sense. The ancillary comments by some of the authors and the
results of the JADA publication are in total disagreement with the vast majority
of research published that looks at elevated mercury levels in subjects with
amalgam fillings. For example, the NIH study on military men discussed above
showed a very significant elevation of mercury in the blood that correlated with
number of dental amalgams. ....
Another recent publication demonstrated elevated mercury in the blood of living
AD patients in comparison to age-matched controls.These studies clearly show
that there should be increased mercury in your blood if you have amalgams and
especially if you have AD and amalgams.
Does not the brain have blood in it? This makes it a total mystery as to how
could the authors of the JADA article not find elevated brain mercury levels in
patient with existing amalgams and/or AD. Even cadavers have brain mercury
levels that correlate with the number of amalgam fillings they had on death.
Further, if you are addressing the contribution of amalgams to brain mercury and
AD wouldn't it be important to divide the AD and control subjects into those
with and without existing amalgams on death? In the JADA article this was not
done and represents a major research flaw! That this was not done also arouses
suspicion.
I participated in submitting a letter pointing out this flaw to editors of JADA
but they refused to acknowledge the letter and did not publish our comments. It
is my opinion that the entire situation around this singular supportive
publication of the ADA position on amalgams, brain mercury levels and AD
represents a weak attempt at controlling the mind-set of well-meaning dentists,
scientists, physicians and medical research administrators.
It definitely impedes honest scientific debate. It also explains the cavalier
attitude of the ADA and NIDCR about elemental mercury exposure and toxicity when
compared to the more serious approaches taken by the EPA and OSHA.
With regards to the JADA article summary that "no statistically significant
differences in brain mercury levels between subjects with Alzheimer's disease
and control subjects." Here I must quote Mark Twain on honesty, "There are
liars, damned liars and statisticians."
Comparing the level of mercury in the AD versus control alone using
straight-forward statistics previously showed a significant difference on
mercury levels in AD versus control subjects. However, there are anomalies,
confounders and other factors that can be considered in this situation,
especially if you don't like the initial results.
This allows one to invoke a Bon-Feroni statistical manipulation. With Bon-Feroni
you include the comparison of one pair of data (that may be statistically
significantly different taken alone, e.g. mercury levels in the brains of AD
versus control subjects) with several other pairs of data rendering the
difference statistically insignificant.
One known weakness of the Bon-Feroni treatment of several coupled pairs of
comparisons is that one very likely will miss a single comparison that is
significantly different, and clever people know this. It is my opinion that
application of the Bon-Feroni manipulation is what happened in this JADA study
that reversed the previous significance of the mercury levels in AD versus
control brain previously reported.
Research previously reported by some of the very same researchers involved in
the JADA study consistently indicated that mercury levels were higher in AD
versus age-matched control brains.
Only when an ADA dentist became involved did the results change to being
insignificant.
I think the data used in this JADA article and funded by NIH needs to be
re-evaluated by a different statistician if we are to ever really know if the
mercury levels in the AD brains differed significantly from controls.
The letter from the ADA President then lists four publications as proof of
amalgams having no statistically significant negative effects. Two of these were
published in Scandinavian Journals, another was a review of the literature in a
Dental Journal, and one was the JADA article mentioned above.
Sweden is well known to have lead the world in the restriction and replacement
of dental amalgams with non-mercury containing materials.
Forces are pushing hard to get the use of amalgams accepted again in Sweden to
eliminate this embarrassment to our ADA. The current situation in Sweden and
some other European countries, Canada and Japan seriously questions the ADA
contention of amalgam safety. What if people in Sweden become healthier without
amalgams?
Additionally, the studies quoted by the ADA President were epidemiological
studies. These are very complex as many confounders are included which make
finding a statistically significant difference very difficult.
So the results are negative, nothing found, and not surprising. However, they
are in disagreement with numerous other similar reports and appear to be
hand-selected to support the ADA position. One has to wonder, since the ADA
President seemed to visit Swedish journals to support the ADA position, how he
missed the research of the Nylander group in Sweden that showed increased
mercury content in brains and kidneys of humans in relationship to exposure to
dental amalgams. ....
Also, the referenced studies in the ADA letter did not involve neurotoxicity,
autism or neurological disease — which is the question at hand. Rather, they
addressed fertility, reproduction and other systemic illnesses. Could not the
ADA find references to focus on neurotoxiological studies?
What about the 1989 study that showed elevated levels of mercury in 54
individuals with Parkinson's disease when compared to 95 matched controls? ....
Further, one ought to consider who was doing these touted ADA studies and any
vested interest they may have in the outcome.
I am also aware of studies done in the U.S.A. by major research universities
that would disagree with the conclusions drawn by the ADA on this subject yet
these articles are not considered in the ADA letter.
At the end of the last publication the quote "Conclusions: No statistically
significant correlation was observed between dental amalgam and the incidence of
diabetes, myocardial infarction, stroke, or cancer."
How does this relate to an article published in the J. of the American College
of Cardiology where the mercury levels in the heart tissue of individuals who
died from Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy (IDCM) contained mercury levels
22,000 times that of individuals who died of other forms of heart disease? Where
did this tremendous amount of mercury come from?
Even a Bon-Feroni manipulation could not make this difference insignificant!
Many who die of IDCM are well-conditioned, young athletes who drop dead during
sporting events — and they live in locations and in economic environments where
sea-food is not a dietary mainstay. Perhaps the victims of IDCM are within the
ADA Presidents "handful of individuals who are allergic to one of its
components."
The ADA says: "The National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research is
currently supporting two very large clinical trials on the health effects of
dental amalgam. Studies underway for several years each in Portugal and the
Northeastern United States involve not only direct neurophysiological measures
but also cognitive and functional assessments."
Dr. Haley says: Do we really think that the NIDCR and associated ADA personnel
are going to deliver up a conclusion to American parents saying "we put a
mercury containing toxic material in your child's mouth that lowered his/her
I.Q. and made him more susceptible to neurological problems in comparison to the
children whom we selected to not get exposed to this toxic material"?
It is my opinion that most bureaucracies don't have a brain or a heart, but they
do have a very strong survival instinct. Therefore, the results presented from
this study will likely follow previously ADA supported research, i.e. no
significant results.
Since the NIDCR started this project only 4 years ago one has to ask why it took
so long for them to get involved since the "amalgam wars" have been going on for
scores of years? Was it the overwhelming amount of modern science showing
mercury from amalgams being a major part of the daily exposure that forced their
hand and they had to develop a defense?
Would I trust the conclusions of this study without knowing who put it together
and who did the statistics? Not any more than I trust the conclusions of the
JADA article mentioned in the ADA letter that stupendously concludes that
mercury from dental amalgams does not get into the brain.
As was proven by the tobacco situation, trying to find any significant negative
effect of one product (amalgams) related to any disease through epidemiological
studies is very difficult and complex. To do this with mercury would be
difficult because of the synergistic effect two or more toxic metals or
compounds (e.g. cadmium from smoking) may have on the toxicity of the mercury
emitted from amalgams.
For example, one publication showed that combining mercury and lead both at LD1
levels caused the killing rate to go to 100% or to an LD100 level. .... An LD1
level is where, due to the low concentrations, the mercury or the lead alone was
not very toxic alone (i.e., killed less than 1% of rats exposed when metal were
used alone).
The 100% killing, when addition of 1% plus 1% we would expect 2%, represents
synergistic toxicity. Therefore, mixing to non-lethal levels of mercury plus
lead gave an extremely toxic mixture! What this proves is that one cannot define
a "safe level of mercury" unless you absolutely know what others toxicants the
individual is being exposed to.
The combined toxicity of various materials, such as mercury, thimerosal, lead,
aluminum, formaldehyde, etc., is unknown. The effects various combinations of
these toxicants would have is also not defined except that we know they would be
much worse than any one of the toxicants alone.
So how could the ADA take any exception, based on intellectual considerations,
to my contention that combinations of thimerosal and mercury could exacerbate
the neurological conditions identified with autism and AD?
Autism and AD have clinical and biological markers that correspond to those
observed in patients with toxic mercury exposure.
Why would the ADA take this position? I personally feel like I have been in a
ten year argument with the town drunk on this issue. Facts don't count and data
is only valid if it meets the pro-amalgam agenda.
The ADA was founded on the basis that mercury-containing amalgams are safe and
useful for dental fillings. This may have been an acceptable position in 1850.
However, modern science has proven that amalgams constantly emit unacceptable
levels of mercury.
Especially as the average life span has increased from 50 to 75-78 years of age
where AD and Parkinson's become prevalent diseases. The ADA can try to verify
its position using selected epidemiological studies. But the bottom line is that
amalgams emit significant levels of neurotoxic mercury that are injurious to
human health and would exacerbate the medical condition of those individuals
with neurological diseases such as ALS, MS, Parkinson's, autism and AD.
I am hoping that the ADA sent this letter to your committee and also placed it
on the ADA web-site to indicate that they are now willing for a wide-open
discussion to take place on the issue of dental amalgams.
I, for one, would welcome a major scientific conference on this issue. The ADA
should feel free to post my letter in response and address any issue they feel
that I am mistaken about.
However, in closing I urge your committee to push forward on the study of the
potential dangers of mercury in our dentistry and medicines. This includes
mercury exposures from amalgams, vaccines and other medicaments containing
thimerosal. The synergistic effects of mercury with many of the toxicants
commonly found in our environment make the danger unpredictable and possibly
quite severe, especially any mixture containing elemental mercury, organic
mercury and other heavy metal toxicants such as aluminum.
Sincerely,
Boyd E. Haley
Professor and Chair
Department of Chemistry
University of Kentucky
http://www.mercola.com/2001/jun/9/amalgam_safety.htm
http://www.mercola.com/2001/jun/9/amalgam_safety2.htm