Dental Offices May Be Source Of Mercury Pollution
US: April 15, 2008
NEW YORK - Dental practices may be a source of a dangerous form of mercury
contamination in the water supply, a small study suggests.
In tests of wastewater from two dental practices, researchers at the
University of Illinois found high levels of methylated mercury -- a
chemically altered form of the metal that is toxic to the brain and nervous
system.
Mercury is part of the silver dental fillings that have long been used to
treat cavities; in this form, mercury is believed to be safe.
However, when dentists use drills to remove these fillings, the tiny mercury
particles that end up in dental wastewater are exposed to sulfate-reducing
bacteria that convert the particles into methyl mercury.
The new findings, published in the journal Environmental Science &
Technology, raise the concern that dental offices may be an important source
of methyl mercury in the public water supply.
"We found the highest levels of methyl mercury ever reported in any
environmental water sample," researcher Dr. Karl J. Rockne, of the
University of Illinois at Chicago, said in a statement.
He and his colleagues estimate that up to 11 pounds of methyl mercury from
dental wastewater may enter the US public water supply each year. The amount
sounds small, but they note that minute amounts of this form of mercury can
be toxic.
The findings are, however, based on tests from only two dental practices --
one "single-chair" office and one 12-chair clinic.
More research is still needed to confirm the results, Rockne said.
In the US, public drinking water supplies are monitored for mercury, and if
a system's levels are consistently above a certain threshold, steps must be
taken to reduce them to acceptable levels.
Mercury that gets into the water can also be consumed by fish and work its
way into the food supply.
Dental offices are far from the most significant source of environmental
mercury pollution in the US Coal-fired power plants emit about 50 tons of
mercury into the air each year.
However, the problem of mercury in dental wastewater can be fixed. Devices
called amalgam separators can help remove mercury particles from wastewater,
and are a "good first step," Rockne said.
But additional measures may be necessary, he added.
"We have to take more steps to prevent the problem from occurring in the
first place," Rockne said. "We're dealing with a pipe -- a control point. As
an engineer, I see this as a problem that is tractable -- something we can
definitely do something about."
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
|