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Whether mercury[Hg] is dangerous to health.If yes up to what level it can injure life.?


Example-If a Thermameter is broken in mouth of a sick pertion & not treated. Upto what level it [Mercury] damage?

Elemental mercury is the main ingredient in dental amalgams. Controversy over the health effects from the use of mercury amalgams began shortly after its introduction into the western world, nearly 200 years ago. In 1845, The American Society of Dental Surgeons, concerned about mercury poisoning, asked its members to sign a pledge that they would not use amalgam. The ASDS disbanded in 1865. The American Dental Association formed three years after and currently takes the position that "amalgam is a valuable, viable and safe choice for dental patients,"[6] In 1993, the United States Public Health Service reported that "amalgam fillings release small amounts of mercury vapor," but in such a small amount that it "has not been shown to cause any 鈥?adverse health effects". This position is not shared by all governments and there is an ongoing dental amalgam controversy. A recent review by an FDA-appointed advisory panel rejected, by a margin of 13-7, the current FDA report on amalgam safety[citation needed], stating the report's conclusions were unreasonable given the quantity and quality of information currently available. Panelists said remaining uncertainties about the risk of so-called silver fillings demanded further research; in particular, on the effects of mercury-laden fillings on children and the fetuses of pregnant women with fillings, and the release of mercury vapor on insertion and removal of mercury fillings.
Today, the use of mercury in medicine has greatly declined in all respects, especially in developed countries. Thermometers and sphygmomanometers containing mercury were invented in the early 18th and late 19th centuries, respectively. In the early 21st century, their use is declining and has been banned in some countries, states and medical institutions. In 2002, the U.S. Senate passed legislation to phase out the sale of non-prescription mercury thermometers. In 2003, Washington and Maine became the first states to ban mercury blood pressure devices. Mercury compounds are found in some over-the-counter drugs, including topical antiseptics, stimulant laxatives, diaper-rash ointment, eye drops, and nasal sprays. The FDA (FDA) has 鈥渋nadequate data to establish general recognition of the safety and effectiveness,鈥?of the mercury ingredients in these products. Mercury is still used in some diuretics, although substitutes now exist for most therapeutic uses.
Minamata disease (姘翠浚鐥? Minamata-by艒?), sometimes referred to as Chisso-Minamata disease (绐掔礌姘翠浚鐥? Chisso-Minamata-by艒?), is a neurological syndrome caused by severe mercury poisoning. Symptoms include ataxia, numbness in the hands and feet, general muscle weakness, narrowing of the field of vision and damage to hearing and speech. In extreme cases, insanity, paralysis, coma and death follow within weeks of the onset of symptoms. A congenital form of the disease can also affect fetuses in the womb.

Don't play with it altogether.

Few substances on Earth are stranger. It shines like a mirror, conducts electricity and is as much of a metal as copper or iron.

Yet this material is a liquid, one of only five naturally occurring elements that are liquid at room temperature.

It is the stuff of legend, the key to alchemy and witchcraft, a deadly poison and yet also a potent medicine. We use it to weigh the air, generate reflections and also to measure our temperature.

And now Brussels is banning it. Of course, not even the European Commission has the power to ban a chemical element, but what they have done is forbidden its use in traditionally made scientific instruments on health and safety and environmental grounds.

Britain's traditional barometer makers now face closure, effectively bringing to an end more than 350 years of a unique craft. Mercury thermometers - every mother's godsend - are similarly under threat.

Mercury is poisonous, rots the brain and is a general menace, Brussels says. Therefore, no more shiny quicksilver in your weather instruments.

So what exactly is this mysterious substance that most of us have only glimpsed through the glass of a thermometer and which has so riled the bureaucrats of the EU?

Quicksilver, the old name for mercury, is a heavy metallic element, 13.5 times denser than water. This density gives rise to some of mercury's most fascinating properties. If you built a bath of mercury and jumped in, you would break your bones.


Once in, you would bob around on the surface like an insect on water, barely sinking in an inch.


If you had the balance you could easily walk on mercury and it is possible to play billiards on a mercury bath - the balls would only sink a fraction of an inch.


When I studied chemistry at school, mercury was most definitely not banned. We were encouraged to touch it, prod and poke the strange glacial metal.


Once we even tried to suck a column of mercury through a tube - a nice illustration of how barometers work. Also a nice way of getting a mouth and lungs full of mercury vapour.


Another time, a ceramic bowl of mercury was placed before the class. Our teacher called us up to investigate its strange properties. I remember taking a penny from my pocket and floating it on the surface of this silvery puddle.


"Go on, try to push it under," I was urged. I pushed. The penny yielded, but only with difficulty. Such is the density of the metal.


To touch cold mercury feels like, well, nothing else on Earth. Not liquid, not solid, but cold, clammy - like cold, fresh liver wrapped in clingfilm.


A mercury fountain was constructed for the 1937 World's Fair in Paris, and in Islamic Spain large reflecting pools were filled with mercury to allow Caliphs to gaze at their reflections.

Thanks to the fact that almost anything will float in mercury baths, they were traditionally used as a low-friction rotation mechanism for the giant mirrors in lighthouses.


Historically, man has always treated quicksilver with a mixture of fear and respect.

Fear because it is toxic, and respect both for its strange properties and its supposed medical uses.


The vapours given off by this extraordinary element are highly toxic. In the 19th century, a process called "carroting" was used in the making of felt hats.

Animal skins were dipped in a solution of mercuric nitrate which turned the fur into a matted felt. The fumes given off by this process poisoned the brains of anyone in the vicinity, causing an epidemic of psychiatric problems among workers in the hat industry, hence the phrase "as mad as a hatter".


Mozart, who died aged just 35, was suspected to have been a victim of mercury poisoning, the rather worrying symptoms of which include memory loss, excessive salivation, emotional oversensitivity, forgetfulness, timidity and delirium. The key symptom is wobbly handwriting.

The composer would not have got his mercury poisoning from playing with thermometers or making hats, but from his notorious womanising.

Syphilis, a venereal disease, was common in the 19th century, and the only treatment was copious doses of mercury - a sort of primitive anti-bacterial chemotherapy.

The use of mercury to treat this disease gave rise to the saying "a night in the arms of Venus leads to a lifetime on Mercury".

Though no proper studies were done to prove it, mercury may have been an effective, if rather brutal, way of treating syphilis. It was administered in multiple ways, including by mouth and by rubbing it on the skin.

One of the more gruesome methods was fumigation, in which the patient/victim was placed in a closed box with their head sticking out. Mercury was placed in the box and a fire was started under the box which caused the metal to vapourise.

Interestingly, it may have been the use of mercury to treat syphilis that gave rise to the whole nonsense that is homeopathy.

In the 18th century, the founder of modern homeopathy, Dr Samuel Hahnemann, noticed that the efficacy of mercuric cures for syphilis was increased if the compounds were ground into a fine paste.

The idea that minute particles of a substance can make more effective medicine is ingrained in homeopathic doctrine, and to this day homeopaths recommend diluted mercury compounds to treat syphilis. Conventional medicine prefers to treat the disease with antibiotics.


It may be dangerous, but mercury is also extremely useful. It has myriad uses - the "silvering" on the backs of mirrors, as a constituent in dental amalgam (despite its toxicity and a publicity campaign by "anti-mercury" dentists, there is little evidence that mercurybased fillings have ever done anyone any harm), and in countless electrical devices.

Mercury compounds have been used even in modern medicine, and mercury was also allegedly used as an extremely cunning weapon in World War II. Allied spies spread a paste of mercury on the wings and fuselages of German planes.

Mercury dissolves aluminium, and the planes mysteriously fell apart in mid-air.

When in medical school we had to do a stint in the clinic (evernngs only), here we administerd an injection of mercury as a treatment of Syphilis. We called this the dart board treatment as we had to throw the syringe into the posterior.

Its the vapour/gas thats the problem.

dont know

A significant number of people suffer an allergic reaction to mercury amalgum dental fillings.Which even pro mercury dentists understand.Theres no evidence it is 100% safe ,so why use it.

The Doctor knows how to treat irrespective of the delay. Please take Doctor's advice.

He may give some Laxatives with Antibiotics to remove the fear you have.

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