Author/Authors :
Mark E. Stone، نويسنده , , Mark E. Cohen، نويسنده , , Denise L. Berry، نويسنده , , James C. Ragain Jr، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
This study evaluated the ability of a chairside filtration system to remove particulate-based
mercury (Hg) from dental-unit wastewater. Prototypes of the chairside filtration system
were designed and fabricated using reusable filter chambers with disposable filter elements.
The system was installed in five dental operatories utilizing filter elements with nominal
pore sizes of 50μm, 15μm, 1μm, 0.5μm, or with no system installed (control). Daily chairside
wastewater samples were collected on ten consecutive days from each room and brought to
the laboratory for processing. After processing the wastewater samples, Hg concentrations
were determined with cold vapor atomic absorption spectrometry (USEPA method 7470A).
Filter systems were exchanged after ten samples were collected so that all five of the
configurations were evaluated in each room (with assignment order balanced by a Latin
Square). The numbers of surfaces of amalgam placed and removed per day were tracked in
each room. In part two, new filter systems with the 0.5μm filter elements were installed in
the five dental operatories and vacuum levels at the high-velocity evacuation cannula tip
were measured with a vacuum gauge. In part three of the study, the chairside filtration
system utilizing 0.5μm and 15μm filter elements was evaluated utilizing the ISO 11143
testing protocol, a laboratory test of amalgam separator efficiency utilizing amalgam
samples of known particle size distribution. Mean Hg per chair per day (no filter installed)
was 1087.38mg (SD = 993.92mg). Mean Hg per chair per day for the 50μm, 15μm, 1μm, 0.5μm
filter configurations was 79.13mg (SD = 71.40mg), 23.55mg (SD = 23.25mg), 17.68mg (SD =
17.35mg), and 4.25mg (SD = 6.35mg), respectively (n = 50 for all groups). Calculated removal
efficiencies from the clinical samples were 92.7%, 97.8%, 98.4%, and 99.6%, respectively.
ANCOVA on data from the four filter groups, with amalgam-surfaces-removed included as a
significant covariate, was statistically significant (P b 0.0001). Tukey post-hoc comparisons
(P ≤ 0.05) indicated that the 50μm filter removed less mercury than all other filters and the
0.5μmremoved more mercury than the 50μmand 15μmfilters. Chairside vacuum measured
on chairs with the 0.5μmfilters installed were minimally affected at the time of installation,
and then gradually diminished as the filters became loaded with debris. The 0.5μm
configuration passed the ISO 11143 testing protocol at 96.8% efficiency.