BEIJING, June 13 (Xinhuanet) -- Silver dental
fillings, officially known as amalgam fillings, contain mercury that may pose a
safety concern for pregnant women and young children, warned the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as quoted by media reports Friday.
In the past, regulators have warned pregnant women
against eating certain fish that contain high levels of mercury, but FDA
said mercury in fillings may cause danger to a developing human's brain, in
response to a lawsuit filed on behalf of various groups.
FDA posted the precaution on its Web site to settle a
lawsuit, making the move a victory for anti-mercury activists.
The warning is not aimed at the general population,
only at two groups already urged to limit mercury from another source -- seafood
-- because too much can harm a developing brain.
The fillings "contain mercury, which may have
neurotoxic effects on the nervous systems of developing children and fetuses,"
reads the FDA warning.
That doesn't mean it truly harms, and the FDA advised
against removing existing fillings. Silver-colored fillings have been used by
dentists for over a hundred years to treat cavities in teeth.
The agency still is studying whether the small amount
of mercury vapor released by chewing and brushing is enough to cause neurologic
disorders or other problems in youngsters.
There have been only a handful of rigorous studies
comparing children given either amalgam fillings or tooth-colored resin
composite fillings that are mercury-free -- and those studies haven't detected
any brain problems.
Nor has that research settled the long-simmering
scientific controversy. Two years ago, the FDA's own independent scientific
advisers said that while amalgam fillings were safe for most people, more
research was needed about potential effects on fetuses and children under six.
(Agencies)