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Denture Cream Zinc Poisoning |
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Denture Cream is designed to provide an adhesive base to solidify dentures with a person’s gums and prevent discomfort and paint o the person wearing them. In most cases Zinc is one of the many ingredients of denture cream that can be harmful when used in excess; Poligrip and Fixodent are just two of many denture creams that contain zinc as a ingredient. When denture creams are used excessively in larger than the prescribed amount on the labeling Zinc poisoning can occur. Unfortunately most people are not even aware that their Denture Cream contains Zinc or that they are using the cream improperly and dangerously. There are approximately 35 million people who wear dentures in the United States alone and recent studies conducted by Dr. Sharon P. Nations of the Texas Southwestern University Medical Center in Dallas and her colleagues reported on four denture-wearing patients who developed neurological problems related to Zinc poisoning. In the medical journal Neurology, Dr. Sharon P. Nations of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas and her colleagues report on four denture-wearing patients who developed neurological problems. All had abnormally high levels of zinc in their blood, accompanied by abnormally low levels of copper. Because denture cream contains zinc, and all of the patients habitually used "extremely large amounts," Nations and her team propose that excess denture cream use led to their neurological problems. Balance between zinc and copper in the body is essential for neurological health. Taking in too much of one of these trace metals can cause depletion of the other. Normal blood levels of copper range from 0.75 to 1.45 micrograms per milliliter (mL), but levels for the patients in the report ranged from less than 0.1 to 0.23 micrograms per mL. The top normal number for zinc blood levels is 1.10 micrograms per mL, but patients had levels ranging from 1.36 to 4.28 micrograms per mL. One patient's symptoms included weakness in the hands and poor balance, while another had weakness in her arms and legs that made her wheelchair dependent, along with cognitive decline and urinary incontinence. These patients showed "mild neurologic improvement" after they quit using denture cream and began taking copper supplements. Another patient took copper supplements but didn't stop using denture cream. His copper levels improved, but his zinc levels remained too high and he showed no improvement in his neurological symptoms. The fourth patient, who took copper supplements and stopped using denture cream, showed improvement in copper and zinc levels, but no improvement in neurological symptoms. Testing revealed zinc concentrations between 17,000 and 34,000 micrograms per gram in the denture creams the patients used. This is the only "plausible explanation" for their high zinc levels and copper deficiency, the researchers say. Used as recommended, a tube of denture cream should last from 3 to 10 weeks, the researchers note, but patients in the report were all using at least two tubes a week. Three had also lost their teeth at a relatively young age, meaning they had been used "extremely large amounts of denture adhesive daily for years." Based on patients' denture cream use, the researchers estimate that they were exposed to at least 330 mg of zinc daily, far more than the recommended daily allowance of 8 mg for women and 11 mg for men. The National Academy of Sciences stated in 2001 that the largest daily tolerable zinc intake is 40 mg. Nations and her team urge people using large amounts of denture cream due to ill-fitting dentures to seek professional care. |
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