Get the ingredient list
of the Dental Materials from your Dentist.
They can commonly be found on the Material Safety Data Sheets that Dentists
have for the materials they use.
The following chemical
groups and families of compounds
are used in Dental Materials.
They may show reactivity.
Restorative products containing these
groups in dissociable,
ionizable, separable or volatile form
MAY OR MAY NOT BE
SUITABLE.
It may require
concurrent body burden reduction and risk management, if used.
Aluminum Group
Antimony Group
*Arsenic Group
Benzylkonium Chloride
Group
*Beryllium Group
Cadmium Group
Chromium Group
Formaldehyde
Germanium
Group
Indium Group
Lanthanum Group
*Lead Group
Mercury Group
Neodimium Group
*Nickel Group
Palladium Group
Polyethimines
Group
Propionates Rubidium Group
Silver Group
Tannins
Group
Tellurium Group
*Thallium Group
*Thimerosal
Toluenes
Group
Tungsten Group
Zirconium Group
Acetates Group
Acrylates Group
Barium Group
Benzil
Bis-GMA
Bismuth Group
Boron Group
Butyraldehydes Butyrates Group
Carboxylate Group
Cellulose Group
Cerium Group
*Cesium Group
Cobalt Group
Copper Group
Eugenol
Europium Fluorides Group
Gallium Group
Gold Group
Hafnium Group
Hexanes Group
Hydroxyapatite Group
Iridium Group
Iron Salts I Oxides Group
Lithium Group
Malienate Group
Manganese Group
Metabisulfite
Methyl Paraben Molybdenum Group
Niobium Group
O-Phosphoric Acid Group
Osmium Group
Phenols Group
Platinum Group
Polyethers Group
Polysulfides Group
Polyvinyls Group
Quinone Group
Rhenium Group
Rhodium Group
Ruthenium Group
Samarium Group
Scandium Group
Selenium Group
Silanes Group
Silicates Group
Sorbates
Strontium Group
Styrenes Group
Tantalum Group
Terbium Group
Tin Group
Titanium
Group
Trihexalamines Group
'Uranium Group
Urethanes Group
Vanadium Group
Xylenes Group
Ytterbium Group
Yttrium Group
Zinc Salts Group
·
Chemical groups and families not
regarded as safe for
any internal or contact use, based on information from World Health
Organization and national toxicology groups.
Inclusion here is for the purpose of total body burden assessment and
cross-reactivity considerations.