We know that toxins are particularly impactful to people with Hashimoto’s, who often have a reduced ability to naturally detox and clear them out. With accumulations in the body over time, heavy metals like mercury can cause stress on the liver, kidneys, and thyroid, and can impair the brain and nervous system.
Some of my clients, while looking for their root cause triggers for Hashimoto’s, have discovered that mercury toxicity is a problem for them. Often, a lifetime of having dental amalgams (silver fillings) placed and replaced in their mouth, is found to be the culprit. Dental amalgams contain over 50 percent of mercury by weight and release tiny amounts of mercury vapor every time people chew.
One colleague, Carrie, discovered how a cracked dental amalgam’s removal triggered her Hashimoto’s. The dental procedure launched her into a year of misery, with rashes and other allergic reactions that could not be resolved. A year later, she was finally diagnosed with Hashimoto’s. It was only then that she pin-pointed her unprotected amalgam removal as the last time she had felt well. With testing, she discovered her thyroid had absorbed mercury from the amalgam filling.
Other clients have been surprised to learn they have mercury sensitivity, which can result from exposure to small amounts of mercury from cosmetics, or contaminated seafood like tuna, negatively impacting their thyroid health.
Research has shown that some forms of mercury are readily absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract and can easily cross both the blood-brain and placental barriers. And mercury has been found stored in the thyroid gland. In one study, the more silver fillings a person had, the higher amount of mercury was found deposited in their thyroid gland. Mercury exposure also affects the conversion of T4 to T3. Higher levels of thyroglobulin antibodies have been found in people who have higher levels of mercury in their bodies.
Could mercury be one of your root cause triggers of Hashimoto’s?
Find out more in this article, where you will learn:
- How we get exposed to mercury
- Symptoms of mercury exposure and toxicity
- Mercury as a trigger for Hashimoto’s
- Testing for mercury toxicity
- Treatment options and natural solutions
How Do We Get Exposed to Mercury?
The two main ways that humans are exposed to mercury are through dental amalgams (silver fillings) and consuming contaminated fish. There are, however, a number of other possible exposures that can occur, given that this naturally-occurring heavy metal is found throughout the environment (soil, water and air). It is also a component or ingredient in a number of consumer products.
Mercury exists in three chemical forms (elemental, organic and inorganic). Each form can expose people in specific ways, and each has its own profile for toxicity.
Elemental Mercury
Elemental (metallic) mercury can cause mercury exposure to humans through both liquid and vapor forms.
In liquid form, elemental mercury is the shiny, silvery liquid found in older thermometers, electrical switches, some batteries (button cell) and fluorescent light bulbs (including compact fluorescent lights – CFLs). The level of mercury found in these items is small, and there is generally no health risks if the item and mercury are kept intact. It is during the production or disposal of these items, or if they break, that they can be toxic to people and the environment.
I have heard stories of how decades ago, kids were actually allowed to touch and play with liquid mercury in elementary school! Thankfully, we now know much more about the risks of this type of direct exposure, as well as the additional impact on the environment if we don’t dispose of mercury-containing items properly.
Elemental mercury is also released into the air as vapor, and this is one of the primary ways humans are exposed to toxic levels of mercury. Dental amalgams (silver fillings) contain over 50 percent elemental mercury by weight, and a small amount of ongoing mercury exposure comes from mercury vapor outgassing from such fillings. Mercury is released every time a person chews. The vapor is absorbed through the lungs and tissue lining the mouth. It then enters the blood, and can rapidly pass through cell membranes, which include both the blood-brain barrier and the placental barrier.
Mercury vapor can also be a side-effect of occupational exposure. People working in mines, automotive industries, or factories where the above mentioned products are manufactured, can all be exposed to unhealthy levels, which is why the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) have strict protocols for managing mercury safety in the workplace. People working in dental offices need to follow strict protocols when working around amalgams, as well as when discarding dental products and debris containing mercury. Gingivitis, excessive salivation, and stomatitis (inflammation of the mouth) are symptoms associated with high occupational exposure.
Low-dose or chronic inhalation of mercury vapor can affect the nervous system. Elemental mercury toxicity symptoms may include fatigue, anorexia, insomnia, weakness, tremors, memory problems, skin rash, changes in vision and hearing, and personality and behavioral changes, including irritability and excessive shyness.
Organic Compounds of Mercury
Methylmercury is one of the most common sources of mercury exposure in humans as the result of eating contaminated fish and seafood. You may know that tuna is a food associated with mercury toxicity (it was one of the first – and often repeated – things I was told not to eat during my pregnancy, although I had already been aware of it)… but, perhaps, you never knew how the mercury made its way into the tuna. Mercury is naturally off-gassed into the ocean through the earth’s crust, and additionally, industrial pollution containing mercury also makes its way into the ocean. Once there, bacteria and algae methylate (chemically convert) the mercury, resulting in methylmercury. This substance then makes its way through the food chain into shellfish, fish, and eventually humans. Bigger fish (like tuna), that eat lots of contaminated smaller fish, typically contain much higher levels of mercury.
Methylmercury is also a form of mercury that is readily absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract and has been shown to cross both the placental and blood-brain barriers in rat studies.
The effects of methylmercury can include sensory disturbances in the arms and legs, loss of peripheral vision, “pins and needles” sensations, cognitive disturbances, and muscle wasting.
Inorganic Mercury Compounds
These compounds are found in medical use and cosmetics (primarily in eye creams, skin-lightening creams and soaps). Contaminated products typically contain mercury and mercury salts. Ingredients to be on the look-out for include: ammoniated mercury, mercury iodide, mercuric iodide, mercurous chloride, mercurous oxide, cinnabaris (mercury sulfide), amide chloride of mercury, quicksilver, hydrargyri oxidum rubrum (mercury oxide), and mercuric chloride. Some foreign companies may not necessarily list mercury as an ingredient.
Believe it or not, the FDA still allows inorganic mercury compounds in certain cosmetics, in particular those meant for the eye area.
Exposure to inorganic mercury can result in an irritant or corrosive effect on the gastrointestinal tract. Mood swings, mental disturbances, memory loss, muscle weakness and skin rashes can occur. The highest concentration of inorganic mercury is found in the kidney, so there can be damage over time.
Symptoms of Mercury Exposure and Toxicity
Once mercury is absorbed, it has a very low excretion rate and tends to accumulate in the kidneys, neurological tissue, fatty tissue, the liver and other organs (such as the thyroid). All forms of mercury should be considered toxic with their effects, including gastrointestinal toxicity, neurotoxicity, and nephrotoxicity (kidney poisoning).
When thinking about exposure, we all need to think about the accumulation of mercury in our bodies over time.
We also need to be aware that some of us may be better genetically adapted to detoxify mercury than others, which I’ll talk about in a moment. Those of us with Hashimoto’s may have more issues with this than the general population.
Here is a summary of the symptoms that I have seen that can occur with chronic mercury exposure:
- Loss of peripheral vision
- “Pins and needles” sensations
- Metallic taste in mouth
- Mood swings, irritability, anxiety and/or depression
- Excessive shyness
- Headaches
- Fatigue
- Brain fog, memory loss or decreased concentration
- Ataxia (nervous system issues such as slurred speech and stumbling)
- Insomnia
- Allergies, dermatitis
- Gastrointestinal issues
- Multiple chemical sensitivity
- Hearing loss
- Muscle tremors or other movement disorders
- Muscle wasting (muscle weakness)
- Loss of balance
- Salivation
- Anorexia
- Hair loss
- Hormonal dysregulation; abnormal menstrual cycles and infertility
I realize this is a very exhaustive list (partly due to the fact that mercury can affect so many different body organs), which may make it tricky to immediately correlate your symptoms to mercury toxicity. Many of the symptoms related to mercury exposure also overlap with those seen in Hashimoto’s.
So you may need to dig a little deeper than simply evaluating symptoms and look at your health history timeline (which should include a focus on your dental health history as well) for more specific clues. I find that many of my clients will identify that earlier dental work, such as having dental amalgams put in/removed/replaced, was a key point of symptom development for them. Others have identified that a high fish/seafood diet (especially eating the most offending types of fish) was a trigger for their thyroid issues. I know from my own personal history that a mouth full of dental amalgams was a trigger for me.
Mercury as a Trigger for Hashimoto’s
Mercury has been found to be stored in the thyroid gland as well as to affect the conversion of T4 to T3, resulting in high T4 with low T3 levels. Associations between positive thyroid antibodies and total blood mercury have also been identified; for example, in women who were evaluated in an NHANES study done between 2007 and 2008, they found higher levels of thyroglobulin antibodies in those with higher levels of mercury.
A 2006 forensic study found that the more mercury amalgams (silver fillings) a person had, the higher amount of mercury was found stored in their thyroid gland. Mercury levels in the renal cortex and the thyroid were respectively about four and five times higher in people with twelve occlusal amalgams or more, compared with those with only three occlusal amalgams. It has been estimated that there are currently over 1,000 tons of mercury in the mouths of Americans!
Another study found that the removal of inorganic mercury-containing dental amalgams resulted in significantly decreased levels of thyroglobulin antibody (TgAb) and thyroid peroxidase antibody (TPOAb).
There is another interesting mercury-thyroid connection. Mercury can deplete the body of selenium, a vital nutrient required in the synthesis of thyroid hormone. We know that most people with Hashimoto’s will be found to have selenium deficiency, and that this is a widely recognized trigger of autoimmune thyroid conditions.
Finally, many people with Hashimoto’s have issues with clearing toxins, referred to as having poor methylation. Some also have genetic variations (polymorphisms) that put them at even greater risks relating to their body becoming a toxic waste dump. Two common polymorphisms are the MTHFR gene variation and Glutathione Transferase (GST) polymorphism. Read more about how common the MTHFR gene mutation is in Hashimoto’s, how it can affect the body’s ability to get rid of heavy metals, and how you can test for these polymorphisms in this earlier article. I also provide information on additional methylation support at the noted link.
Clearly, our genetics can both predispose us for thyroid issues as well as, potentially, impact how sensitive we are to metals such as mercury. In my clinical practice, I have found that mercury sensitivity is a problem for many of my clients. Given that most people have amalgams, this is an obvious initial concern for people with sensitivities. Thus, one of the first things I usually recommend is that people get tested for sensitivity to metals. Not everyone with Hashimoto’s has a hypersensitivity to heavy metals, but if they do, that can point us to how to prioritize next steps (such as removing amalgams).
Testing for Mercury Toxicity
My recommendation to clients if they suspect mercury toxicity (due to symptoms, dental history, direct mercury exposure or having had a high fish/seafood diet) is to do the following testing:
- Test for the earlier mentioned polymorphisms (How well can you detox mercury?)
- Test for mercury sensitivity (Are you hypersensitive to mercury?)
- Test for levels of mercury in your body (How much mercury is your body storing?)
So how do you know if you have mercury sensitivity?
You can take a test known as the MELISA (Memory Lymphocyte Immunostimulation Assay) test. The MELISA test will tell you if your body has an immune reaction to mercury. If you do, that tells us that a priority for you may be to remove any silver fillings you may have. Remember, based on what the research – and my own clinical data – tells us, if you test positive on the MELISA test, you will likely see a reduction in antibodies if you remove your mercury amalgams. One 2010 study found that thyroid antibodies were normalized in about 70 percent of patients with a positive MELISA test, after replacement of their silver fillings.
Once you find out if you have one or more of the genetic variations that can diminish your body’s ability to detoxify itself from heavy metals, and you know if you have mercury sensitivity, you can check how much mercury is currently stored in your body. Tests used to measure mercury levels typically involve samples of blood, urine or hair.
The difficulty in measuring mercury levels in your body, however, is that different types of measures are only optimal for specific types of mercury. Measurements are also sensitive to the timing of the mercury exposure. (Did you recently eat contaminated seafood?)
That’s why I like a more complex test to identify a more accurate reading for mercury levels. The test I like is the Doctor’s Data – Urine Toxic Metals – Mercury Kit for mercury testing. This is a provoked urine test, which involves taking a chelating agent (DMSA or DMPS; your doctor will need to provide this along with prescribing/ordering the test for you) that will bind to the mercury and detox it through your urine. The urine is then collected and measured over the following 6 hours (or whatever period of time your doctor wants to see).
Once you’ve done this testing, you and your practitioner can put a plan in place to reduce your existing mercury toxicity, as well as minimize future exposure and detox issues.
Treatment Options and Natural Solutions
Along with testing, there are a number of things you can do to lower your existing and ongoing mercury load.
Dietary Changes
Some seafood and fish are higher in mercury than others, so continue incorporating healthy seafood into your diet, but look for lower-mercury sources. Remember that the larger, predatory fish are typically more mercury heavy. So avoid ahi tuna, bigeye tuna, king mackerel, orange roughy, shark, swordfish, tilefish, and marlin. Stick with lower-mercury sources like rainbow trout, salmon, sardines, mussels, and Atlantic mackerel. Do not eat anything from a known contaminated lake. I look for wild-caught and always ask where my fish is sourced as well.
The Environmental Working Group (EWG) has an excellent guide to making the most-informed seafood choices. Here is a helpful wallet card from the National Resources Defense Council (NRDF) that can also help you. It is important for people with autoimmune conditions to get adequate fatty acids in their diet, so please be sure to supplement with fish oil if you aren’t getting enough healthy seafood in your diet.
Liver Support
Supporting the liver’s own detoxification pathways may be a really helpful intervention for anyone with mercury toxicity. In particular, NAC is a super supplement that can be helpful for people with Hashimoto’s who are dealing with all types of toxicity, including mercury toxicity. N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC) supports detoxification pathways and healthy gut function, can reduce thyroid antibodies, and helps with oxidative stress and chronic inflammation. In the body, NAC turns into the antioxidant glutathione, supporting liver function and helping the liver clear out toxins such as heavy metals. You can read more about NAC, including drug interaction information and cautions (such as not taking it if you have sulfur sensitivity), at the linked to article.
NAC is just one recommendation in my Liver Support Protocol. Most people with Hashimoto’s are prone to having liver congestion, and heavy metal toxicity can add to this liver backlog. I have found that liver support helps many of my clients feel better, some in as little as two weeks. You can read more about the importance of liver support – and why liver congestion can be particularly common for those having thyroid issues – in this earlier linked to article.
I have found that chelation, a more aggressive intervention for getting rid of toxins, is often not necessary if people add appropriate liver support.
I personally used my own liver support protocol for arsenic toxicity, and this cleared the arsenic and got rid of my symptoms with no side effects (that story is for another day!). I later utilized the chelating agent DMSA for copper toxicity, and this worked really well at first… but then I developed a really angry rash all over my body, as well as a sulfur intolerance from the DMSA (I have found this to occur in clients as well, especially those with the CBS gene mutation).
Naturally, I ended up having to learn how to overcome copper toxicity without using DMSA, and then also learned how to start tolerating sulfur again! I will share more details on these protocols in future articles, but for now, they’re described in my book, Hashimoto’s Protocol. #thingsilearnedthehardway
Amalgam Evaluation, Removal and Replacement
If you are mercury sensitive, you may want to prioritize the safe removal of your existing amalgams. Even if you are not mercury sensitive, if you test at a high level for mercury in your body, you should consult a biological dentist regarding their recommendation on removing dental amalgams. Improper removal can cause a large exposure to mercury all at once and lead to worsening symptoms. Again, I would recommend a liver support protocol similar to the one I’ve outlined in Hashimoto’s Protocol and other articles before and after amalgam removal.
Chelation Options
I prefer to use a more gentle herbal chelation protocol versus the more “powerful” prescription chelation therapy when possible, but I’ll talk about both here. These therapies involve mobilizing the toxins, absorbing them (so they don’t recirculate in the body), and removing them from the body.
Herbal Metal Detox Protocol:
- Use concentrated cilantro to mobilize the heavy metal toxins.
- Take 2 drops twice per day before meals (or 30 minutes after charcoal or psyllium mixture) for 1 week on/3 weeks off; may repeat for 1 week each month
- Please note: no matter how “gentle,” chelating agents will displace mercury from where it’s stored, and without using a binding agent to remove the mercury from the body, the mercury can end up moving to a different organ and causing more issues. This is why step 2 below is crucial.
- Use a fiber (psyllium, rice bran or apple pectin) mixture, with activated charcoal, to absorb heavy metal toxins from the gut.
- Add 1 teaspoon of psyllium husk fiber to 8 ounces of water and drink; follow up with another 8 ounces of water. Ingest the mixture 2 hours apart from food and other supplements, and do this 1-3 times per day. If using apple pectin or rice bran, take 7-10 g per day.
- Start with 1 capsule of activated charcoal daily (mid-day, around 3:00 to 4:00 pm); work up to 3 capsules. This helps absorb toxins from the intestinal tract.
- Be sure to utilize both the fiber and activated charcoal, as activated charcoal can be constipating.
- A note about fiber: Ideally, you will have already cleared out any gut infections you may have had, especially SIBO. Detoxification protocols that contain fiber can aggravate SIBO as well as other types of gut imbalances.
- Supplement with magnesium citrate, as activated charcoal can deplete the body’s stores.
- Take 100-300 mg of alpha-lipoic acid (ALA) daily to increase glutathione production (avoid this if you have a CBS mutation as ALA is a sulfur containing supplement; you can find out if you have this mutation using the 23andme test).
- It may help to continue taking vitamin C, a multivitamin, betaine with pepsin (heavy metals deplete stomach acid), probiotics, magnesium, zinc, selenium, and NAC as you work on clearing toxins out of your body.
- Ensure the alkalinity of your urine is optimal for detoxing; a recommended pH is greater than 7. You can use pH testing strips to measure the pH. If it is consistently acidic, supplementing with magnesium can help raise the pH.
- The duration of treatment will depend on the overall toxic load.
Prescription Chelation:
Prescription chelation is a more powerful therapy, which can be very effective, but it should not be undertaken without the involvement of a medical professional who is fully versed in chelation. If not done properly, chelation can lead to toxins recirculating and taking up residence in other parts of the body, leading to other adverse reactions and even more autoimmune reactions. Side effects of chelation are common, as drawing out the toxins too fast can overwhelm the detox pathways that are already overburdened due to having Hashimoto’s in the first place.
Chelation uses substances (called chelators) that bind the metals and pull them out of the body. Different chelators are used, which include DMPS, EDTA, and DMSA. I recommend DMSA, as I feel it is the safest, can be taken orally, and the dose can be adjusted to match the best/safest “detox speed” for you. Note that people with sensitivities to sulfur containing compounds should not use DMPS and DMSA, as these agents are sulfur based.
Chelation protocols may last anywhere from a few months to a couple of years. Your practitioner will provide supplements such as magnesium and will likely have you do additional liver support. Sweating can help with detox, and your practitioner may have you incorporate hot yoga, infrared sauna, and detox baths as well.
Potential chelation side effects include: further buildup of toxins, altered liver and/or kidney function tests, dehydration, low blood calcium, nutrient depletions (they bind up all kinds of things… including nutrients), and rashes.
Note that people with Hashimoto’s often report feeling worse, rather than better, after prescription chelation agents. I feel that part of the reason why this could be the case could be due to sulfur overload. Furthermore, practitioners often do not use the chelating agents with fiber, use them before healing the gut and supporting liver pathways (thus toxins recirculate instead of being eliminated), and do not replenish lost nutrients (this results in new nutrient deficiencies).
This is why I prefer liver support and my fundamental Hashimoto’s protocols that focus on liver, adrenals and gut, before jumping into chelation.
Supplements to Displace Toxins
There are various nutrients that may aid with clearing toxins via displacing them from their receptor sites through competitive binding, through alkalizing the urine, and through producing detoxifying molecules within the body.
- Zinc, molybdenum, and B vitamins – One school of thought on why toxins accumulate in the body focuses on receptor competition between toxins and nutrients. According to this theory, if receptor sites are occupied with adequate nutrients, then toxins will not be able to bind to those receptors and will be excreted. In pharmacy school, I had an entire year of medicinal chemistry classes focused on how different receptors interacted with various substances, and this theory makes a lot of sense to me based on what I know about competitive receptor binding. This mechanism has been described in great detail between copper and zinc. Zinc deficient individuals tend to become copper toxic due to copper accumulation. Taking zinc (in higher doses >30mg per day) can displace toxic levels of copper.
- Magnesium Citrate, Magnesium Glycinate, or Potassium Citrate – These can alkalize the urine, making certain toxins more likely to be eliminated via that pathway.
- Selenium and NAC – These can ensure adequate levels of glutathione (an important molecule that detoxifies heavy metals and helps support overall liver function).
Reducing Ongoing Exposures
There are several ways you can be proactive in protecting yourself from excessive mercury exposure:
- Detox your personal care routine! Check the labels of your personal care products and cosmetics for ingredients that include the mercury substances referenced earlier. Typically, products that are labeled “skin-lightening,” “whitening” or “anti-aging” are more likely to contain these ingredients. Note that, while many of these products may have been brought in by foreign manufacturers, they are often sold on everyday sites we shop at, like Amazon.
- Be wary of commercially-prepared Ayurvedic medicines, especially those purchased on the internet. One study found that nearly 21 percent of these types of medications contained detectable levels of mercury, lead, and/or arsenic. Many rasa Shastra medicines, manufactured in India, were found to contain significantly more heavy metals than acceptable limits.
- Find a biological dentist for removal or addition of amalgams.
- Be smart when it comes to shopping for seafood – think small and wild-caught!
- Follow safety protocols if handling broken thermometers, CFLs or other products containing mercury.
Additional Helpful Resources
For more ways to protect yourself from mercury exposure, I encourage you to take a look at the following resources:
- What to do if a mercury thermometer breaks
- Cleaning up a broken CFL safely
- MELISA Foundation and testing info
- How to find a mercury-safe dentist (Questions to ask when looking for a biological dentist)
- Clifford Materials Reactivity site
- Smart Seafood Buying guide
- Mercury levels in commercial fish and shellfish (reference sheet)
- Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch List (making healthy and ocean-friendly choices); you can also get their app
What You Can Do Today
One of the best initial steps you can take when attempting to figure out what might be making you feel worse is to document your health history timeline. Answer the question, “When was the last time you felt well?”. Then assess what occurred right before that time frame, including dental procedures and potential mercury exposures. If you have a diet high in fish and seafood, are you eating the little fish or the predators? All of this info can help you determine if mercury toxicity might be a trigger for your symptoms.
If it is, follow my recommendations to improve your body’s detoxing capabilities and get tested. That will help point the way to where you should prioritize your efforts, such as whether removing existing dental amalgams might be time-sensitive for you.
Support your liver as a priority. There are so many ways you can do that. Please refer to the earlier mentioned article on liver support for recommendations.
Finally, focus on changing even a few things that could be impacting your ongoing mercury exposure, such as reading cosmetic labels, eating healthier fish, and using greater caution when handling products containing mercury (and please help the environment, too, by disposing of mercury-laden products such as CFLs appropriately). After all, we don’t want our children to have even greater issues with mercury contamination in their lifetime!
I hope this information helps you on your journey!
P.S. For continued updates and interaction, please become a part of our Facebook community and sign up for my newsletter to get a free book chapter from my first book, recipes, a Thyroid Diet start guide, and notifications about my latest research.
References
- Tchounwou PB, Yedjou CG, Patlolla AK, Sutton DJ. Heavy metal toxicity and the environment. Exp Suppl. 2012;101:133–164.
- Park JD, Zheng W. Human exposure and health effects of inorganic and elemental mercury. J Prev Med Public Health. 2012;45(6):344–352.
- “Health effects of exposures to mercury.” EPA, The US Environmental Protection Agency. Accessed July 10, 2019. https://www.epa.gov/mercury/health-effects-exposures-mercury#metallic
- Kajiwara Y, Yasutake A, Adachi T, Hirayama K. Methylmercury transport across the placenta via neutral amino acid carrier. Arch Toxicol. 1996;70(5):310-4.
- Kerper LE, Ballatori N, Clarkson TW. Methylmercury transport across the blood-brain barrier by an amino acid carrier. Am J Physiol. 1992 May:262(5 Pt 2):R761-5.
- Takahashi T, Fujimura M, Koyama M, et al. Methylmercury Causes Blood-Brain Barrier Damage in Rats via Upregulation of Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Expression. PLoS One. 2017;12(1):e0170623. Published 2017 Jan 24.
- “Health effects of exposures to mercury.” EPA, The US Environmental Protection Agency. Accessed July 10, 2019. https://www.epa.gov/mercury/health-effects-exposures-mercury#methyl
- “Mercury poisoning linked to skin products.” FDA, US Food and Drug Administration. Updated July 26, 2016. Accessed July 10, 2019. https://www.fda.gov/consumers/consumer-updates/mercury-poisoning-linked-skin-products
- “Health effects of exposures to mercury.” EPA, The US Environmental Protection Agency. Accessed July 10, 2019. https://www.epa.gov/mercury/health-effects-exposures-mercury#compounds
- Park JD, Zheng W. Human exposure and health effects of inorganic and elemental mercury. J Prev Med Public Health. 2012;45(6):344–352.
- Tchounwou PB, Yedjou CG, Patlolla AK, Sutton DJ. Heavy metal toxicity and the environment. Exp Suppl. 2012;101:133–164.
- Gallagher CM, Meliker JR. Mercury and thyroid autoantibodies in U.S. women,NHANES 2007-2008. Environ Int. 2012 Apr;40:39-43.
- Guzzi G, Grandi M, Cattaneo C, et al. Dental amalgam and mercury levels in autopsy tissues: food for thought. Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 2006 Mar;27(1):42-5.
- “Dental mercury amalgam fillings: reactions and side-effects.” IAOMT. International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology. Accessed July 10, 2019. https://iaomt.org/resources/dental-mercury-facts/dental-mercury-amalgam-side-effects/#_ednref5
- Sterzl I, Prochazkova J, Hrda P, et al. Removal of dental amalgam decreases anti-TPO and anti-Tg autoantibodies in patients with autoimmune thyroiditis. Neuro Endocrinol Lett. 2006 Dec;27 Suppl 1:25-30.
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- EWG News and Analysis. “Dangerous levels of mercury found in skin creams purchased on Amazon, Ebay.” EWG. Environmental Working Group. Published Nov 15, 2018. Accessed July 10, 2019. https://www.ewg.org/news-and-analysis/2018/11/dangerous-levels-mercury-found-skin-creams-purchased-amazon-ebay
- Saper RB, Phillips RS, Sehgal A, et al. Lead, mercury, and arsenic in US- and Indian-manufactured Ayurvedic medicines sold via the Internet [published correction appears in JAMA. 2008 Oct 8;300(14):1652]. JAMA. 2008;300(8):915–923
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KC says
I have Hashimoto’s and have followed Dr. Wentz for years and really appreciate the important article. Twenty years ago I went to St. Augustine FL and ate Grouper at a wonderful restaurant and immediately started to swell up on my arms and face. By the time I got back to my home near Kennedy Space Center I had to go to the Hospital and had IV’s to make sure the swelling came down. I also had a problem after having a flu shot which for years before I had a “live” one where I worked for the Space Shuttle industry and had never had a problem with it. However, when I had the flu shot with the Thimerosal compound in it, I became extremely ill and that is when I was told that it had a slight mercury base that I wasn’t aware of. Ever since that time I have not been able to have the flu shot or any other shot that has a Thimerosal compound base. Thank you for this very important information!
Dr. Izabella Wentz says
KC – thank you so much for sharing your journey.
Mary Hazelwood says
Hello De. Wentz,
I’ve been taking the recommended NAC from Rootcology. I also have taken MSM Flakes for a few years. Is that too much sulfur? Or should I be taking both of these supplements?
Thank you!
Dr. Izabella Wentz says
Mary – thank you for reaching out and sharing. <3 I am not able to advise on this without a comprehensive health assessment. I recommend that you discuss this with your personal doctor.
Dana Flores says
Thank you so much for this most informative article on Hashimotos and Mercury and it’s influence on your thyroid. I have been following Dr. Wentz for many years (5 or 6) and she has been extremely helpful and such a blessing in aiding me to manage my Hashimotos diagnosis in 2014. I also have the MTHFR variation 1298C that inhibits me from detoxing heavy metals such as Mercury. My husband and I recently relocated to Costa Rica to live in July and week before last I went to an independent lab to have a thyroid panel done, especially since my last lab work was completed in March 2019, before we relocated from the state of Oregon. My then thyroid antibodies were in the mid 200’s (higher than ever) even though I have been following a gluten free, dairy free, soy free, egg free, sugar free diet for the last 4 + years. One of my health goals in living in Costa Rica was to have all 7 of my amalgam fillings removed as I know this is a contributing factor/trigger in Hashimotos. Well, I had them removed and to my amazement the TGO & TPO antibodies had reduced as seen by the lab report to be <20 and 28 (lower than ever) respectively! I attribute the removal of these decades (between 30-40 yrs) old fillings to have made a huge difference. Thank you Dr. Wentz for this article and many more you have shared over the years :). I have yet to find a reliable and available source of these supplements NAC, Selenium I had access to in the USA. Here any incoming supplements purchased online have to pass inspection via the Health Ministry and even vitamins are prohibited and ceased by the agency.
Dana Flores
Dr. Izabella Wentz says
Dana – thank you so much for sharing you journey. That’s amazing! I am happy to hear you are taking charge of your health. Please keep me posted on your progress.
Joanne Dillard Ferrier says
Great information! I have hyperthyroidism not hashimoto’s. I can , however, relate to most of the symptoms. I’ve had problems with surgery on left parathyroid & thyroid with severed vocal cord on left side. I have adenoma on right side. Dr. wants to inject it with solution rather than risk another surgery that might damage other vocal cord. Have never been checked for heavy metals. Is this a route I should now consider?
Dr. Izabella Wentz says
Joanne – thank you! I am so sorry you are dealing with all of this. <3 Nodules and goiters are often the result of toxicity and/or the autoimmune process. So, doing interventions to reduce the autoimmune attack on the thyroid, and toxicity, can be helpful to reduce them. Usually, people with Graves have hyperthyroidism, and they are treated conventionally with thyroid suppressing drugs (methimazole) or radioactive iodine to destroy the thyroid. At that point, the thyroid will no longer produce hormones on its own, and these people end up on Synthroid.
Most thyroid conditions result from the immune system attacking the thyroid because the immune system is out of balance. Even when the thyroid is taken out surgically or treated with radioactive iodine the autoimmunity still persists in most cases. Many people will have their thyroids removed, and will develop new autoimmune disorders such as Lupus, Rheumatoid arthritis, etc. The immune system just finds a different target.
We need to rebalance the immune system to prevent this. Sometimes the autoimmunity can be reversed as well! The gut determines your immune system. With the exception of discussing proper thyroid medication dosing, the majority of my website and my book focuses on balancing the immune system. The info I present is based on my own research and journey for overcoming my autoimmune thyroid condition. Here is an article you might find helpful: https://bruno-michael-wentz.dev01.rmkr.net/articles/hashimotos-and-thyroid-nodules/
NathGal says
Bonjour. J’aimerais savoir si durant la pause de 3 semaines sans teinture mère de coriandre on doit continuer la prise de psyllium et charbon végétale ou doit on prendre 1 semaine Tm coriandre, psyllium, charbon et les 3 autres semaines pause totale. Merci
Dr. Izabella Wentz says
NathGal – thank you for reaching out. For questions about my protocols please email my team at info@thyroidpharmacist.com and they will be happy to help. <3
michelle Seldon says
hello Dr. Wentz, as a child of around 4 year old, i was exposed to eating lead based paint and had mercury poisoning from having most of my molar filled in with almagam mercury. recently i as soon as last year i had all of the almagum tkaen out due to fears of being poisoned by them. i believe i have hatchmoto disease becuse of my symptoms.
Dr. Izabella Wentz says
Michelle – thank you so much for sharing your journey. I’m so sorry. <3 Toxins and chemicals are established environmental triggers for developing Hashimoto’s in people who are genetically predisposed. These include iodine intake, bacterial and viral infections, hormonal imbalances, toxins, as well as therapy with certain types of medications and mercury! I highly recommend that you work with a functional medicine clinician to be a part of your own health care team. It’s an entire medical specialty dedicated to finding and treating underlying root causes and prevent serious chronic disease rather than treating individual disease symptoms. Here are some resources I hope you find helpful:
DENTAL AMALGAMS & HASHIMOTO'S
https://bruno-michael-wentz.dev01.rmkr.net/articles/dental-amalgams-silver-fillings-root-cause/
FUNCTIONAL MEDICINE APPROACH TO THE THYROID
https://bruno-michael-wentz.dev01.rmkr.net/articles/functional-medicine-approach-to-the-thyroid
CLINICIAN DATABASE
https://bruno-michael-wentz.dev01.rmkr.net/database-recommended-clinicians/
Glynda Gadow says
I WOULD HAVE LOVED TO HAVE READ ALL OF THAT BUT THE PRINT WAS SO LIGHT AND TINY I COULD ONLY READ A SMALL BIT IF IT.
Dr. Izabella Wentz says
Glynda – thank you so much for your feedback. I’m so sorry you are having trouble reading the article. If you continue to have trouble please feel free to email my team at info@thyroidpharmcist.com and they wil be happy to help. ❤️
Sharron Butler says
Hello Dr Izabella ,
I was a dental nurse for 25 years. I have thyroid issues recently diagnosed Hypothyroidism. I believe I have Hashimotos as symptoms fit.
I was exposed to large amounts of Mercury in its raw state.In the beginning of my career as a youngest I was taught to roll mercury with Alloy to make dental fillings. I was exposed constantly exposed to vapour as we removed fillings. No PPE back then.
GPS will not take it seriously to test me further.
Not sure how to proceed Help.
Dr. Izabella Wentz says
Sharron – thank you so much for sharing your journey. ❤️ I’m so sorry! The most common triggers in Hashimoto’s are nutrient deficiencies, food sensitivities, intestinal permeability (leaky gut), stress, an impaired ability to get rid of toxins and in some cases, infections. I highly recommend that you work with a functional medicine clinician to be a part of your own health care team. It’s an entire medical specialty dedicated to finding and treating underlying root causes and prevent serious chronic disease rather than treating individual disease symptoms. I believe that everyone needs to find a practitioner that will let them be a part of the healthcare team. You want someone that can guide you, that will also listen to you and your concerns. You want someone that’s open to thinking outside of the box and who understands that you may not fit in with the standard of care. It’s a good idea to ask some standard questions when contacting a new doctor for the first time. Something else to consider is you can work with a functional doctor remotely, via Skype. You could also contact your local pharmacist or compounding pharmacy, who may be able to point you to a local doctor who has a natural functional approach. But I encourage you to keep looking for the right one for you! Here are some resources I hope you find helpful.
CLINICIAN DATABASE
https://bruno-michael-wentz.dev01.rmkr.net/database-recommended-clinicians/
FIND A FUNCTIONAL MEDICINE CLINICIAN
https://ifm.org/find-a-practitioner/
COMPOUNDING PHARMACIES
https://bruno-michael-wentz.dev01.rmkr.net/database-recommended-compounding-pharmacies/
BUILDING YOUR OWN HEALTH TIMELINE
https://bruno-michael-wentz.dev01.rmkr.net/sample-health-timeline/
Hashimoto’s Self-Management Program
https://bruno-michael-wentz.dev01.rmkr.net/enroll-in-hashimotos-self-management/
ROOT CAUSE RESET
https://bruno-michael-wentz.dev01.rmkr.net/enroll-in-root-cause-reset/