Volume 28, Issue 3 p. 163-165

Palladium in dental alloys – the dermatologists’responsibility to warn?

Werner Aberer

Corresponding Author

Werner Aberer

University Department of Dermatology, Vienna, Austria

W. Aberer, Department of Dermatology, University of Vienna, Medical School, Vähringer Gurtel 18, A-1090 Vienna, AustriaSearch for more papers by this author
Henriette Holub

Henriette Holub

University Department of Dermatology, Vienna, Austria

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Robert Strohal

Robert Strohal

University Department of Dermatology, Vienna, Austria

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Rudolf Slavicek

Rudolf Slavicek

University Department of Stomatology, Vienna, Austria

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First published: March 1993
Citations: 73

Abstract

Palladium is increasingly used in industry, but also in fine jewellery and in dentistry. Thus, palladium-silver alloys comprise a substantial part of the noble metal ceramic alloy sales in Western countries. The increased use of this metal seems, however, to be paralleled by a rise in the number of reports of palladium allergy. Recently a European study reported a sensitization rate of 2.8%. In Austria, where palladium has started to displace amalgam in dental fillings because of concerns about mercury toxicity, and gold due to price factors, we have found a sensitization rate of 8.3% in unselected eczema patíents. Despíte the current lack of clear clinical relevance of this finding, these numbers should motivate us to question this substance as “the alloy of the future”.

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