Author: Herrström P, Holmén A, Karlsson A, Raihle G, Schütz A, Högstedt B.
Source: Arch Environ Health.
Year: 1994
Comment:
This study finds a "low but significant" correlation between number of amalgam surfaces and mercury levels, and it also notes differences in the impact of mercury on girls and boys among the children tested.
Abstract / Excerpt:
“Occupational high-dose exposure to metallic mercury can cause immune disturbances in sensitive individuals. Whether low-dose exposure to inorganic mercury from dental amalgam has this effect in humans is one of the issues related to the concept of oral galvanism and is supported by results of animal studies. This study explored some cellular immune factors (B- and T-lymphocytes, T4, T8, monocytes, neutrophilic, eosinophilic, and basophilic granulocytes, and large unstained cells) and some humoral immune factors (immunoglobulins IgG, IgG1, IgG2, IgG3, IgG4, IgA, IgM, IgE, albumin, alfa-1-antitrypsin, orosomucoid, haptoglobin, and antinuclear antibodies) in 41 healthy 15-y-old schoolchildren. The relationship between these factors and amalgam fillings and mercury concentrations in plasma (P-Hg) were investigated. A low, but significant correlation (r = 0.40, p < .05) was found between the number of amalgam surfaces and the P-Hg values, which were low for both sexes (median value = 1.8 nmol/l). There was no significant influence of the number of amalgam surfaces or P-Hg on the immune factors tested, except random findings. The girls had significantly higher values of T8, IgG, and IgG1 than the boys.”
Citation:
Herrström P, Holmén A, Karlsson A, Raihle G, Schütz A, Högstedt B. Immune factors, dental amalgam, and low-dose exposure to mercury in Swedish adolescents. Arch Environ Health. 1994; 49(3):160-4.