I asked him if he could prevent the mercury he removes from entering my body 
and 
he said oh yes, and something about high speed drill and vaporizing, etc.  So 
how are you supposed to know if you can trust the dentist you've used 
successfully for 21 years or not.  And if there are 100 dentists in the area, 
how would you know which one could do it better?

Pat





________________________________
From: Beth <csilverl...@yahoo.ca>
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Wed, November 3, 2010 9:57:07 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Mercury Filling


I also heard, years ago, that you should go to a dentist that specializes in 
removing those
fillings. So that you do not become poisoned in the removal process. Any 
dentist 
can remove
them but not all dentists do it properly.
Beth


>
>I would suggest you find a dentist who will protect you during the process.  
>It 
>sounds like this one is playing with your health.
>PT
>
>
>
>
________________________________
 From: Pat <pattycake29...@yahoo.com>
>To: silver list <silver-list@eskimo.com>
>Sent: Tue, November 2, 2010 3:58:23 PM
>Subject: CS>Mercury Filling
>
>I went to the dentist today and although they said the gums were very healthy, 
>I 
>
>have a tooth with a big mercury filling that needs a crown.  It was originally 
>filled in 1989 and has some decay.  The dentist, who calls them silver 
>fillings, 
>
>quit using them many years ago but won't come out and say they're bad.  They 
>now 
>
>have crowns with no metal, made of zirconia.  I'll be glad to get rid of the 
>old 
>
>filling, but I'm sure this regular dentist won't be doing all sorts of 
>whatever 

>the ones do who specialize in removing mercury fillings.  It's to  be  done 
>one 

>week from tomorrow.  Is there something I can take to start protecting me from 
>the mercury I'll be inhaling or whatever?  Anything I should do afterwards?
>
>Thanks, Pat
>
>
>
>