Abstract
Dental amalgam emits mercury, especially during setting. In addition, the preparation of the amalgam and its compaction into the cavity involve unbound metallic mercury or create a waste product with free metallic mercury. The present study was performed to explore whether emission of mercury in these situations would measurably influence the individual urinary mercury concentration of dental patients as a result of a single-session treatment with dental amalgam restorations. Informed consent was obtained from the parents of nine children about to be treated with amalgam restorations as part of their regular dental care. The children delivered a total of five morning urine samples before, during, and after the treatment period. No effect on the urine mercury concentration was found during the treatment period. Conclusively, one single session of amalgam treatment did not per se represent a mercury exposure of sufficient quantity to be detectable in a longitudinal, individual study.
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