Fecal mercury (Hg) provides a good indication of recent or ongoing exposure to elemental Hg, and to a much lesser extent Hg that has been excreted from the body in bile. Data collected at Doctor’s Data indicates a linear association between fecal Hg concentration and the number of amalgams currently in the mouth. Fecal Hg for subjects with 9 to 11 dental amalgams in place was 20-times greater than that
of subjects without any dental amalgams in place (0.60 and 0.03 g/gram dry weight, respectively). Dental amalgams typically contain about 50% elemental Hg, and constant abrasion associated with chewing and bruxism releases very small particles of Hg which are poorly absorbed (about 5%) in the gastrointestinal tract. A direct association between fecal Hg levels and health has not been established, but a land mark study of amalgam placement in monkeys indicated there was an associated induction of co-resistance to both Hg and antibiotics by pathogenic bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract, particularly for species in the Enterobacteriaceae family. Such was also reported for miners exposed to elemental Hg while working in gold mines.
Methylmercury, which is abundant in predatory fish, is almost entirely absorbed and thereby does not show up nearly as prevalent in feces as does amalgam-derived inorganic Hg. In fact the presence of just a few dental amalgams precludes definitive contribution of fish consumption to total fecal Hg. The study conducted at Doctor’s Data indicates that consumption of greater than 36 ounces of fish per month in subjects without dental amalgams was associated with a level of fecal Hg equivalent to that of subjects
with only 1-2 amalgams (0.16 mg/kg dry weight).
The use of Hg in fungicides and pesticides (including that in marine paints) has declined due to environmental concerns, but residual Hg persists from past use. Except for fish, the human dietary intake of mercury is negligible unless food is contaminated with one of the previously mentioned forms/sources.
Analysis of Hg in red blood cells and hair provides a good estimate of sustained exposure to methymercury from fish; methylmercury partitions into those two matrices to a far greater extent than does inorganic Hg.
What does it mean if your Mercury result is too high?
Fecal mercury (Hg) provides a good indication of recent or ongoing exposure to elemental Hg, and to a much lesser extent Hg that has been excreted from the body in bile. Data collected at Doctor’s Data indicates a linear association between fecal Hg concentration and the number of amalgams currently in the mouth. Fecal Hg for subjects with 9 to 11 dental amalgams in place was 20-times greater than that
of subjects without any dental amalgams in place (0.60 and 0.03 g/gram dry weight, respectively). Dental amalgams typically contain about 50% elemental Hg, and constant abrasion associated with chewing and bruxism releases very small particles of Hg which are poorly absorbed (about 5%) in the gastrointestinal tract. A direct association between fecal Hg levels and health has not been established, but a land mark study of amalgam placement in monkeys indicated there was an associated induction of co-resistance to both Hg and antibiotics by pathogenic bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract, particularly for species in the Enterobacteriaceae family. Such was also reported for miners exposed to elemental Hg while working in gold mines.
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