Neurological
symptoms among dental assistants
a cross-sectional study
Moen BE, Hollund BE, Riise
T.
J Occup Med Toxicol. 2008
May 18;3(1):10.
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND: Dental assistants help the dentist in preparing material for
filling teeth. Amalgam was the filling material mostly commonly used in Norway
before 1980, and declined to about 5% of all fillings in 2005. Amalgam is
usually an alloy of silver, copper, tin and mercury. Copper amalgam, giving
particularly high exposure to mercury was used in Norway until 1994. Metallic
mercury is neurotoxic. Few studies of the health of dental assistants exist,
despite their exposure to mercury. There are questions about the existence of
possible chronic neurological symptoms today within this working group, due to this
exposure. The aim of this study was to compare the occurrence of neurological
symptoms among dental assistants likely to be exposed to mercury from work with
dental filling material, compared to similar health personell with no such
exposure.
METHODS: All dental
assistants still at work and born before 1970 registered in the archives of a
trade union in Hordaland county of Norway were invited to participate (response
rate 68%, n=41), as well as a similar number of randomly selected assistant
nurses (response rate 87%, n=64) in the same age group. The participants
completed a self-administered, mailed questionnaire, with questions about
demographic variables, life-style factors and neurological and psychosomatic
symptoms (Euroquest).
RESULTS: The dental
assistants reported significant higher occurrence of neurological symptoms;
psychosomatic symptoms, problems with memory, concentration, fatigue and sleep
disturbance, but not for mood. This was found by analyses of variance,
adjusting for age, education, alcohol consumption, smoking and personality
traits. For each specific neurological symptom, adjusted logistic regression
analyses were performed, showing that these symptoms were mainly from arms,
hands, legs and balance organs.
CONCLUSIONS: There is a
possibility that the higher occurrence of neurological symptoms among the
dental assistants may be related to their previous work exposure to mercury
amalgam fillings. This should be studied further to assess the clinical
importance of the reported symptoms.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18485237?dopt=AbstractPlus