I specifically questioned the material cited in the article as it pertained to the toxicity of amalgam, citing a lack of falsifiable data brought to the table and an overall lack of any qualitative explanation as far as the methodologies used to reach the figures cited in the article. I've demonstrated that the figures represented in the article don't have any factually credible basis when taking into consideration the overall lack of widespread and elevated mercury toxicity levels, specifically in women of childbearing age, in spite of the ubiquity of amalgam -- which should lead to far, far different conclusions if the article's figures are consistent with reality. Thus, the burden of substantiating the material you've cited falls to your shoulders.
Again, it's basic science. If the figures don't correspond to what's actually being observed in the overall demographic in question, the figures aren't representative of what's actually going on. Specifically, chewing and ingesting food doesn't lead to 1 to 50 ppb of mercury being ingested and absorbed into the body, since this would be reflected in mercury levels present in the overall population. It isn't. The study is flat-out wrong. It's demonstrable, and the 2 - 2.5% of women of childbearing age that actually do have elevated levels of mercury toxicity as cited in the 2009 - 2010 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey demonstrates this.
Again, it's basic science. If the figures don't correspond to what's actually being observed in the overall demographic in question, the figures aren't representative of what's actually going on. Specifically, chewing and ingesting food doesn't lead to 1 to 50 ppb of mercury being ingested and absorbed into the body, since this would be reflected in mercury levels present in the overall population. It isn't. The study is flat-out wrong. It's demonstrable, and the 2 - 2.5% of women of childbearing age that actually do have elevated levels of mercury toxicity as cited in the 2009 - 2010 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey demonstrates this.