Abstract.
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Conventional amalgams are regarded as less favorable because of their
proneness to corrosion and mechanical weakness. An invention by a Canadian
scientist in 1963 marked the introduction of the modern non-gamma-two
amalgams said to overcome these drawbacks. Now some thirty years later it
is obvious that they also exhibit a drastic reduction in stability. The
emission of mercury vapor - see Figure 2 - is drastically increased and is
combined with the formation of deposits on the surface after abrasion, see
picture above. No scientific article has been accepted for publication on
this striking and highly visual phenomenon of instability - just a few
IADR Abstracts have been dealing with it.
These new amalgams were marketed for a long time in opposition to the
composition-standard in force. When they became dominating on the market
the standard was rewritten allowing the use of non-gamma-two amalgams that
had already been sold for more than a decade. Standards for testing the
stability - emissions of toxic substances - of amalgams are non-existing.
One reason for the increased strength of modern amalgams could be that
they contain bronze.
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Fig. 1
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Copper amalgam is currently used in Russia, in Norway until 1994 and in
Sweden in the 1980's and is regarded as the most unstable of all
amalgams used. Their rate of corrosion is legendary, in rare cases giving
teeth a greenish color from corrosion products. Statistics on the use of
this material are lacking and scientific articles are few. It was
predominantly used in children with extensive caries attacks. In an almost
unknown letter from the Scandinavian Institute of Dental Materials, NIOM
the intake of metals from copper amalgam is estimated. It is concluded
that the intake of mercury - in a worst case scenario - can be 315 times
that from food, see Figure 1. Except Norway no other of the NIOM-countries
or the NIOM board were informed. Copper amalgams have also been used in
Germany. In the US copper amalgam has been used in an admixture with
conventional amalgam.
Excretion-rates of mercury in subjects with a fair amount of amalgam
fillings exceeds the WHO provisional limit of total intake by food.
Testing of all types of dental materials including composites, porcelains,
cements and so on must take place prior to the introduction on the market.
Dental materials - by far the most wide spread implant in the population -
must be subjected to both stability tests revealing emitted substances and
relevant biological testing.
To the Introduction