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About the International Academy of Oral Medicine
and Toxicology
In 1984, thirteen dentists were discussing a seminar they had just
attended on the dangers of mercury from dental amalgam fillings. They
agreed that the subject was alarming. They also agreed that the seminar,
though long on fireworks, was short on science, and if there really
was a problem with dental mercury, the evidence ought to be in the
scientific literature. So, like thirteen musketeers vowing “all
for one and one for all,” they set out to find the evidence,
or failing that, to sponsor new research that would provide the answers
they sought.
Over two decades later, the IAOMT has grown to over 500 active members
in North America, with affiliated chapters in fourteen other countries.
The years have been very fruitful, as the Academy and its members
have chronicled and promoted the research that has proven beyond a
reasonable doubt that dental amalgam is a source of significant mercury
exposure, and a hazard to health. It has taken the lead in educating
dentists and allied professionals in the methods of safely dealing
with amalgam fillings, and safely disposing the waste. It has also
led the way in developing more biocompatible approaches in other areas
of dentistry, including endodontics, periodontics, and disease prevention.
All this while maintaining the motto, “Show me the science!”
A more biocompatible approach is the hallmark of "biological dentistry." In using that term, we are not attempting to stake out a new specialty for dentistry, but to describe an attitude that can apply to all facets of dental practice, and to health care in general: to always seek the least toxic way to accomplish the mission of treatment, to do it while treading as softly as possible on the patient's biological terrain.
Scientific Advisory Committee
The scientific activities of the IAOMT are overseen by an advisory
committee composed of world leaders in biochemistry, toxicology and
environmental medicine. They are:
Boyd Haley, PhD, FIAOMT, chairman. Professor and former Chairman
of the Department of Chemistry, University of Kentucky; permanent
member, NIH Biomedical Sciences, Study Section.
Thomas Burbacher, PhD, Associate Professor of Environmental and Occupational
Health Sciences, Research Affiliate, Center on Human Development and
Disability, Director, Infant Primate Research Laboratory, University
of Washington Center for Human Development and Disability.
Louis W. Chang, PhD, Emeritus Professor of Pathology, University
of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Founding Director of the Taiwan
Division of Environmental Health & Occupational Medicine.
H. Vasken Aposhian, PhD, Professor of Cellular and Molecular Biology,
Professor of Pharmacology, University of Arizona, College of Medicine.
Herbert Needleman, MD, Professor of Child Psychiatry and Pediatrics,
University of Pittsburgh school of Medicine.
Maths Berlin, PhD, Advisor to this Committee. Professor Emeritus
of Environmental Medicine, Medical Faculty of Lund, Sweden. Dr. Berlin
was the chairman of two World Health Organization conferences on mercury
exposure in 1991.
Research
Some of the most dramatic developments in the scientific case against
amalgam were sponsored wholly or in part by IAOMT, including:
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The famous “sheep and monkey studies,” by Vimy
and Lorscheider, in which amalgam fillings labeled with radioactive
mercury were placed in the animals’ teeth, and demonstrated
that the mercury quickly disseminated around their bodies. They
showed mercury distribution to the fetus of pregnant animals,
and a variety of physiological lesions.
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Neurobehavioral studies of dentists and staff, by Echeverria,
et. al., linking neurological and behavioral deficits with their
occupational exposure to mercury.
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Animal model experiments by Haley and Pendergrass, et. al.,
demonstrating that mercury vapor in the range that we are exposed
to by amalgam fillings can get into a rat’s brain and cause
a biochemical lesion identical to Alzheimer’s disease.
These researchers had previously clarified the biochemical mechanism
by which this happens.
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Tissue culture experiments using
growing nerve cells by Leong, et. al., that show how vanishingly
small quantities of mercury can totally disrupt the newly
growing nerve endings, leaving the characteristic neuro-fibrillary
tangles found in Alzheimer’s disease.
Education
Scientific meetings are held twice a year around the US and Canada,
with a varied program of cutting edge material. DVDs and audio CDs
of previous meetings are available through the website store.
The IAOMT has an Accreditation program for active members – an
intensive educational experience, and certification for those who
complete it. Show the public that you are up to speed in the basics
of biocompatible dentistry, and methods for safely dealing with mercury
exposure from amalgam.
Political Action
IAOMT members have been expert witnesses before Congress, FDA, state
legislatures, Health Canada, and other government bodies. We support
the effort to inform consumers about health risks from amalgam mercury
and water fluoridation, and support efforts toward eliminating these
risks. We have testified before regulatory agencies about the environmental
effects of dental mercury in wastewater, and support regulations to
separate mercury from the waste stream of dental offices.
IAOMT members have also been expert witnesses before dental boards
and trial courts, supporting mercury-free dentists in their struggles
against harassment by the pro-mercury establishment.
Ongoing research, education, and political action, along with patient
referrals, peer support, and the camaraderie of a group of docs who
are truly interested in healing, make the IAOMT an exciting organization
of which to be a member.
Tax Exempt Non-Profit Status
Effective April 20,2005, the Internal Revenue Service of the USA
recognized the IAOMT to have federal tax exempt status under section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, with a Public Charity Status
509(a)(2). Our annual information return, Form 990, is available for
public inspection, as well as the exemption application, exemption
letter, and supporting documents. A copying and postage fee will apply.
The IAOMT is therefore qualified to receive tax deductible bequests,
devises, transfers, or gifts under section 2055, 2106, or 2522.
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