1819: A Mercury-based dental amalgam filling was invented
by the English chemist, Bell.
1826: The dental amalgam mercury filling was first used in
England and France.
1830: Amalgam fillings were used in the United States.
Numerous harmful effects were soon widely reported.
1840: The American Society of Dental Surgeons denounced
the use of amalgams due to concerns about mercury
poisoning. Members of the society were required to pledge
to avoid the mercury amalgam fillings. But many dentists
continued using amalgams, since they were cheaper, faster
and easier to place than gold materials.
1859: The pro-mercury amalgam faction in America formed
its own dental society, first called the National Dental
Association; it was later re-named the American Dental
Association (ADA).
1926: A prominent German chemist, Alfred Stock,
discovered that mercury was the source of his own health
problems. After having his own amalgams removed, Stock
then studied the health problems of many of his friends and
advised them to have their amalgams removed. He studied
the release of mercury vapor from the amalgams and
published his findings in over thirty scientific papers. Stock
led an international movement to halt the use of mercury
amalgam filling.
1930s: Stock’s laboratory and most of his records were
destroyed in a World War II bombing raid, halting the antiamalgam
movement had spearheaded.
1957: Dr. Karl O. Frykholm of Sweden published a study
incorrectly claiming that when saliva covers an amalgam>
filling, the mercury is no longer released. Since then, the
ADA began to cite Frykholm’s paper as proof that amalgam
fillings are stable and safe.
1973: An American dentist suffering from MS, Hal Huggins,
DDS, MS, met a Brazilian dentist, Olympia Pinto, at a
conference in Mexico City. Pinto shocked Higgins by telling
him that amalgam fillings are unstable and mercury from
amalgams can trigger illness like Hodgkin’s disease and
sickle cell anemia. Eventually Dr. Pinto sent Dr. Huggins
many studies on amalgam research. Huggins, avidly
learned about the amalgam health issue and became a
noted speaker and writer on the hazards of amalgams.
1979: Measurable Mercury coming from amalgam. Gay
and others at the University of Iowa reported a measurable
release of mercury vapor from amalgam fillings; when the
amalgams were stimulated by chewing, brushing or hot
beverages the release was far greater. In 1981 Svare, at
Ohio State, confirmed Gay’s findings.
1987: In Sweden, Nylander, Friberg and Lind published a
study of mercury levels in the brains of people who died of
sudden, unexpected death. Mercury levels in the occipital
lobe brain cortex correlated significantly with the number
of amalgam fillings in the person’s mouth.
1987: Nylander of Sweden and Eggleston of California, did
a similar autopsy study on victims of sudden, unexpected
death, confirming a strong correlation between brain levels
of mercury and the number of amalgam filling surfaces in<
teeth.
1989: Dentists Poisoned. Nylander and Friberg publish
an autopsy study showing that mercury levels were much
higher in the pituitary glands (in the head) and the thyroid
glands of dental staff as compared to a non-dentist control
group. The mercury levels in the pituitary glands of the
dental group was about forty times higher than that of a
controls. Other studies proved dentists to have a higher
rate of irritability, depression and mood disorders. Dentists
have a six-fold higher rate of suicide than other white collar
professionals.
1990: Lorscheider and Vimy at the University of Calgary
School of Medicine placed amalgam fillings with radioactive
mercury into pregnant sheep and monkeys. After just 29
days after the placement of the mercury amalgams, the
mercury was traced and found in the kidneys, the liver, the
gastrointestinal tract, the brain, and many other parts of
the body including the unborn fetus. For both the mother
and the fetus, the highest mercury level was in the pituitary
gland, suggesting an amalgam mercury role in depression
and mood disorders.
1983: University of Calgary research dentist Murray Vimy,
joined with Michael Ziff, and American dentist and author,
to found the International Academy of Oral Medicine
and Toxicology (IAOMT) to educate dentists and other
professionals about evidence based dentistry. With his
father, Sam Ziff, Michael Ziff went on to author books on
mercury free dentistry, dental mercury detox, and other
related issues.
1988: DAMS groups began forming in Albuquerque,
Denver, Chicago and elsewhere to educate the public.
DECEMBER 16, 1990: The CBS television show Sixty
Minutes, hosted by Morley Safer, and viewed by 30
million Americans, did an expose on the hazards of
mercury amalgams; the host interviewed scientists Lars
Friberg, Fritz Lorscheider, Murray Vimy and Boyd Haley.
The program even exposed the biased attacks by state
dental licensing boards on mercury free, holistic dentists.
The ADA spokesmen squirmed under the pointed questions
of the host.
1993: Its All in Your Head, by Hal Huggins began making
further headway in expanding public awareness of the
amalgam mercury problem.
1993: Anne Sommers, Ph.D., a microbiologist, reported that
the placement of mercury amalgam fillings in monkeys and
in humans causes a major shift in kinds of bacteria found in
intestines. Through natural selection, some bacteria survive
the mercury poison and are mercury resistant. Interestingly,
the mercury resistant were found to have become antibiotic
resistant; Sommers concluded that amalgams tend to
produce more anti-biotic resistant bacteria.
1993, DECEMBER: The largest German manufacturer of
amalgam, Degussa AG, stopped making amalgam.
1994: Sweden announced phase out of amalgam fillings,
starting with pregnant women and children.
1994: Lorscheider, Vimy, Pendergrass and Haley reported
that elemental mercury vapor from amalgam fillings is
toxic to brain neurons. Low-dose mercury causes the
neurofibrillary tangles in the brain – regarded as a key
marker of Alzheimer’s disease.
1994: A human autopsy study on babies who had died of
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) was published by
Drasch and others at the University of Munich in Germany.
Drasch found a strong correlation between the mercury
levels in the brains and kidneys of the babies and the number
of amalgam fillings in the mother’s teeth. These findings
were confirmed by another autopsy study conducted
in the 1996 by Lutz. These studies showed that mercury
from a mother’s mercury amalgam fillings is typically the
major source of mercury for her unborn child. The German
government then acted to curb the use of amalgams in
children and women of child bearing age.
1995: G. Mark Richardson, Ph.D., released a report for
Health Canada, Canada’s chief health regulatory body,
on mercury exposure from dental amalgam fillings. He
found that amalgams contribute about 50% or more of an
adult’s mercury exposure and present an unacceptable
hazard. Richardson advised Health Canada to ban dental
amalgams; Health Canada did not go that far but in 1996
it established guidelines for dentists discouraging the use
of amalgams in children, pregnant women, people with
kidney disorders and other vulnerable people.