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RESEARCH REPORT |
1 Harvard Medical School, Harvard School of Public Health, Childrens Hospital, Boston, MA, USA;
2 New England Research Institutes, 9 Galen Street, Watertown, MA 02472, USA;
3 The Forsyth Institute, Boston, MA, USA; and
4 University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, USA
* corresponding author, Smckinlay{at}neriscience.com
High-dose exposures to elemental mercury vapor cause emotional dysfunction, but it is uncertain whether the levels of exposure that result from having dental amalgam restorations do so. As part of the New England Childrens Amalgam Trial, a randomized trial involving 6- to 10-year-old children, we evaluated the hypothesis that restoration of caries using dental amalgam resulted in worse psychosocial outcomes than restoration using mercury-free composite resin. The primary outcome was the parent-completed Child Behavior Checklist. The secondary outcome was childrens self-reports using the Behavior Assessment System for Children. Childrens psychosocial status was evaluated in relation to three indices of mercury exposure: treatment assignment, surface-years of amalgam, and urinary mercury excretion. All significant associations favored the amalgam group. No evidence was found that exposure to mercury from dental amalgams was associated with adverse psychosocial outcomes over the five-year period following initial placement of amalgams.
KEY WORDS: dental amalgam children psychosocial function randomized trial
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