
The highly toxic metal is part of the traditional
mixture that's packed into cavities. Some dentists say
it is no longer necessary, and that patients should be
warned of possible dangers.
By AMY PYLE, Times Staff
Writer

This article originally appeared in
the Los Angeles Times on Monday, October 25, 1999.
(see http://www.latimes.com/news/state/19991025/t000096608.html)
With hyperlinks shown in RED
text and additions shown in BLUE
text inserted into the original article by ALT, Inc.

SAN FRANCISCO--Seated in dentist
Robert Hepps' chair with a cavity in need of attention,
you are sure to hear about the beauties of porcelain,
and will probably see a gruesome video of teeth
deteriorating around black metal fillings.
Hepps believes porcelain fillings
are healthier for teeth and--since traditional fillings
are half mercury--possibly for the rest of the body. He
believes patients have a right to know that, and the law
is on his side. (For more
information on the composition of "silver"
amalgam see http://www.caulk.com).
But the mild-mannered Hepps
tiptoes around the health issue, focusing on porcelain's
aesthetic advantages out of fear that total honesty
could put his license at risk.
The problem is that despite
California laws requiring full disclosure of the dangers
of toxic substances, state dental regulators are
committed to the use of mercury-based fillings. At a
hearing last March, Board of Dental Examiners president
Robert Christoffersen summarily dismissed mercury-free
dentistry, saying it "does not fit the current
practice of dentistry."
Christoffersen's statement kicked
up a furor inside and outside the dental community. It
unleashed the feisty Consumers for Dental Choice lobby
group on California, where it has petitioned the Board
of Dental Examiners to require dentists to warn patients
about mercury's health hazards, sued the board alleging
that it illegally discriminated against another dentist
at the March hearing, and asked the state attorney
general to get involved in the issue. (For
more information on the Consumers for Dental Choice see http://www.amalgam.org/).
All three actions are aimed at
heightening public awareness of the state's 1993 law
requiring such warnings, and of the state Department of
Consumer Affairs' assertions that not telling patients
violates the anti-toxins initiative approved by voters
13 years ago.
The debate over what patients
should be told and when has even injected free-speech
issues into what is typically among the least
controversial branches of health care.
"We have been really quite
stunned; at least among the conservative dental
establishment, there is active hostility to informing
consumers," said James Wheaton, president of the
Environmental Law Foundation in Oakland.
Wheaton's firm was a lead plaintiff in lawsuits related
to Proposition 65, the 1986 initiative that requires
workplace warnings for the presence of toxic substances,
including mercury.
At one extreme in the debate are
the dental regulators, who take their cue from the
American Dental Assn. It considers traditional
fillings--made from an amalgam of mercury and other
metals--cheaper, easier to use and more durable than
alternatives. In fact, the ADA bestows the
dentists' seal of approval, frequently seen on
toothpaste, on dozens of amalgam products. (The
ADA actually has an exclusive license for a National
Institute of Standards and Technology patent on
silver-based filling materials. The patent resulted from
developmental work at NIST supported by the National
Institute of Dental Research to find an alternative to
mercury-containing dental restoratives. See http://www.msel.nist.gov/mselannualreport97/dental&medical.html)
At the other extreme are dentists
who believe the mercury in amalgam causes severe health
problems ranging from Alzheimer's disease to leukemia.
They think the ADA is biased because it is paid for the
endorsements. (see Alzheimer's
Disease and Hg, Heart Disease
and Hg, and the Mercury
Toxicity Slide Show).
Somewhere in the middle are
dentists like Hepps, who turned to alternative fillings
partly because they could not get a definite answer
about mercury's safety or their liability for problems
traced to mercury.
"I relate it to
cigarettes," Hepps said. Against tobacco companies,
he said, plaintiffs' attorneys are "saying, 'You
knew there was a risk. Why didn't you tell people?'
Shouldn't we be saying there is a risk [with mercury]
and this is your choice?" (see
Tobacco)
Studies abound about mercury's
toxicity, second only to uranium as a human poison.
But fillings are so small that many scientists consider
them irrelevant. (What
studies these scientist are reading? Editorials
published in the Journal of the American Dental
Association? Certainly not these articles published in
peer-reviewed scientific, medical and dental journals on
Mercury Amalgam).
No Consensus in Health Studies
The few studies that seriously
evaluate fillings reach conflicting conclusions about
exposure. Some say fish, water and perhaps air all
transport far more mercury into the human body than
fillings do. Others, including a 1997 report by
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, say nothing
deposits more inorganic mercury into the body than
fillings. (see studies on the Release
of Mercury from Silver Dental Amalgam).
Environmental toxicologist William
Pease reviewed much of the literature on mercury
fillings in connection with Proposition 65 litigation.
He is unconvinced that they pose a significant health
threat to patients--although he believes there is a
threat to dental hygienists. (Once
again we ask - What studies are these guys referring
to?)
"It's a totally unnecessary
exposure, even if it's not the worst health problem in
the world," he said. But dental regulators
have "a certain circle-the-wagons mentality . . .
and maybe they don't want to think they've been
poisoning their patients."
Sweden, Denmark, Austria, Germany,
England and Canada all have recommended that dentists
seek alternatives to mercury fillings, especially for
pregnant and breast-feeding women and in some cases
children and those with kidney problems. (To
see why, look at these articles on the Effects
of Mercury Exposure on Reproduction and
Development).
The American Public Health Assn.
will vote next month on a proposed policy to urge
dentists to eliminate "mercury-containing products
where feasible alternatives are available."
Statistics indicate that is
already happening quietly in many dentists' offices as
the quality of alternative filling materials improves.
The Academy of General Dentistry, a respected
professional group, found that in 1998, 43% of its
members reported using mercury fillings in more than
half their patients' cavities; this year, the number is
40%.
The cost of alternatives remains a
barrier for some patients. Newer porcelain, ceramic and
resin fillings cost anywhere from 20% to 100% more, and
not all insurance plans will cover the difference.
In California and other states
where regulators are hostile to the mercury-free
movement, dentists recommend alternatives warily.
In Arizona earlier this year, a
dentist was put on probation for preaching the benefits
of being mercury-free. In 1996, a Maryland dentist faced
state sanctions after publishing an article on filling
removal and detoxification. In 994, the California
board revoked the license of an Apple Valley dentist who
ran an ad in the local paper entitled "Mercury
Emission from Silver Fillings Unsafe by Government
Standards."
Part of the problem in California
is that pinning down the state's policy is like playing
tag. The Board of Dental Examiners' official position is
that it looks to the dental profession to set standards,
according to Chief of Enforcement Jeff Wall. The
California Dental Assn., the state's largest
professional organization for dentists, in turn reports
that it relies on the ADA.
The ADA notes that mercury has
been used for 160 years--since blacksmiths and barbers
won out over medical professionals, who preferred to
pull teeth or fill them with gold. Alternatives are
still too fragile, the ADA says, even though many
dentists who use them report that is no longer the case.
Informing Patients of the Issues
Where the ADA, and the state, draw
a clear line is with dentists who remove healthy
fillings, declaring them toxic, or who suggest removal
will cure chronic diseases. They are
"unethical" and subject to loss of their state
licenses, according to the ADA.
That is why even moderate dentists
like Hepps worry. After hearing him out in his clinic
near San Francisco State University, most people . . .
would rather do [porcelains] . . . than have metal in
their mouths," Hepps said.
Although he emphasizes aesthetic
issues, patients who ask about mercury do get an
explanation of Hepps' 1996 decision to quit tamping into
people's cavities.
"On the [traditional filling]
instruction sheet it has a skull and crossbones; it
says, 'Danger: poison,' and that refers to
mercury," he said. "I thought, 'I don't want
to put that in my kids' mouths or my mouth.' "
Hepps stopped using mercury after
learning the ADA had filed testimony in a lawsuit
related to a patient who had a bad reaction to fillings,
arguing that it "owes no legal responsibility to
protect the public from allegedly dangerous products
used by dentists." (see the ADA's
Legal Position) Although the organization
later explained it was simply citing standard legal
principle for third-party negligence, its response meant
something different to Hepps.
"A lot of my colleagues were
concerned about it," he said. "Who do we turn
to if we have a problem? Are they sidestepping the
issue? Are they going to back us on this?"
Hepps strives to distance himself
from more messianic dentists such as Andy Landerman, the
subject of last March's hearing before the state board.
Landerman, who has lost his license, has sued the board
for reinstatement in Sonoma County Superior Court. He
practices what is sometimes described as holistic
dentistry, linking an array of diseases to "dental
toxicity" related not only to mercury fillings but
also to root canals and wisdom tooth extraction.
Radical Dentist Seen as Menace, Martyr
He advocates drilling out all
mercury fillings, pooh-poohing scientific findings that
doing so releases dormant mercury into the body.
"Is it better to have exposure of one big magnitude
over a two-hour period, or to be exposed all your
life?" he asks.
Landerman practiced in Northern
California for 20 years before his license was suspended
in 1987, after former patients alleged he removed
healthy teeth and sound fillings. As a condition of
reinstatement, the state required Landerman to take some
courses in traditional dentistry. He regained his
license in 1990, then lost it again two years later for
returning to his old ways.
When Landerman reapplied this
year, the board turned him down, saying he had not kept
up with changes in dentistry.
Landerman is a martyr to people
like Bob Jones of Denver, who counts himself a victim of
traditional fillings. Jones, a former airline pilot,
formed the nationwide coalition of patients and dentists
called Consumers for Dental Choice after experiencing
what he considered a miracle.
Jones said he suffered fatigue so
severe he could barely drag himself out of bed. He found
a local dentist willing to remove all his old fillings
and crowns, a process he said amounted to an instant
cure. His dentist has since lost his license for
allegedly misleading patients with scientifically
unsupported claims. (For more
information on Bob Jones see his web site at http://cavitatmedtech.homestead.com/index.html).
Though Consumers for Dental Choice
defends dentists like Landerman, the demands in the
group's petition against the California board are far
from radical: Advise dentists to better inform patients,
hygienists and other employees of the potential hazards
of mercury and notify them that they open themselves up
to liability if they do not disclose those hazards.
Whether any of that will make a
difference in dentists'--or patients'--lives remains to
be seen. And the petition could be preempted by the
anticipated settlement of a suit that Wheaton, the
environmental lawyer, filed years ago against 36 makers
of mercury filling material under Proposition 65.
One firm has already agreed to
require dentists who use its products to post mercury
warnings, provided its larger competitors also comply.
An agreement with the bigger firms is near, Wheaton
said.
What's more, six years ago a law
required the board to develop and distribute to all
California dentists a fact sheet on the pros and cons of
various types of fillings. The document was supposed to
urge dentists to discuss all alternatives with patients.
The board dragged its feet, and
when the fact sheet was produced the next year, the
Department of Consumer Affairs--the Board of Dental
Examiners' own parent agency--criticized it for
minimizing the mercury controversy.
The sheet stated that "the
preponderance of scientific evidence showed mercury
fillings posed no health risk except to a few sensitive
patients. (Where is this
"science" published?). The
consumer department countered that, because of the lack
of conclusiveness in existing research, "the lack
of evidence of a health risk is not necessarily evidence
that [mercury fillings] are safe."
That fact sheet was never revised
and has never been widely distributed, being sent out
only "if someone requested it," said Wall, the
dental board's enforcement chief.
How can dentists and consumers
know to request it?
"That's a good
question," Wall said. "I don't know."
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