A few years ago I wrote a piece entitled "The Miraculous Transformation of Princess Diana - by Removal of Amalgams?", the whole of which is appended below.
The Princess of Wales' experiences may be regarded as "anecdotal" evidence of the effects on individuals of having amalgam dental fillings removed from their teeth. And of course some people might suggest that the explanation for the dramatic turnaround in her life was due to other factors.
However, I believe that not only is there an overwhelming body of so called "anectdotal evidence" implicating amalgam fillings in being either contributary to or even the prime cause of a great many neurological disorders, but that the scientific explanation for the causal link between amalgam and these disorders is there to see if people would only look.
Do any dentists have examples of evidence from your own experiences which would have influenced you in your decision to align yourself with the mercury-free dentistry movement?
If so, would you be able to share them by posting them to this forum?
Remember that most national dental associations continue to insist that there is "nothing wrong" with amalgam fillings
Best regards,
Keith P Walsh
********************************************
Ok let's get one thing clear from the start, I am not a Diana nut.
However, in late 1992 I wrote a series of letters enquiring about the electrical behavior of metal amalgam dental fillings. You can find them at:
book.boot.users.btopenworld.com/intro.htm
As a result of the subsequent response to these letters, and of my own personal experiences both before and after they were written, I have come to believe (firmly) that the electrical potentials generated by amalgam dental fillings are able to dissipate electrical energy through the nerves in people's heads and, in so doing, make people feel unhappy.
And in extreme though not unusual cases they are also able to cause permanent neurological injury which cannot be repaired simply by the removal of the fillings.
So what would any of this have to do with Princess Diana?
Well, there are several anecdotal references available on the internet which imply that in the late 1980s Princess Diana had all her metal amalgam fillings removed and replaced with alternative, non-amalgam, dental restorations. (One source suggests that this course of action had actually been recommended by her mother-in-law, HRH The Queen, though I am not aware that this can be confirmed.) Perhaps one of the more authoritative of these references is the one given by Sky News chief correspondent Stuart Ramsay:
"In newspapers – an exclusive that Princess Diana was not having life threatening surgery in hospital but was in fact having white fillings put in her teeth. Seems completely daft that such a story is even news – but it was big news back then and probably contributed to my decision to get out of tabloid newspaper work, unfortunately the broadsheets were no different it made the front pages on them as well. TV was my last hope. In TV I got hold of pictures of British sailors being rescued from the English Channel – Sky got its first Royal Television Society award."
See:
C:\Users\Keith\Documents\fillings\di\Sky News About us Q and A.mht
(click open "What was your first big break?")
Most people recognise that from the early part of her marriage and continuing up until round about the end of the 1980s, Princess Diana became a more and more desperately unhappy person; suffering from a range of symptoms including bulimia, lack of self-esteem and suicidal fantasies; the like of which many populist medical practitioners are inclined to assert adds up to something called "clinical depression".
However, this condition appears to have been completely cured because, beginning from the early 1990s and continuing up until her death in 1997, this same Princess Diana appeared to be transformed into one of the most confident, life seeking and, if I dare say it myself (and making allowances for her perhaps unrealistically exalted position), even admirable young women in the public eye.
How did such a dramatic change come about?
Well there have been many guesses put forward in the attempt to explain this transformation. But most of these guesses are made subjectively, and without any due consideration of the possible influence that the electrical potentials, which would have been generated by the amalgam dental fillings in her teeth, may have been having on her natural neurological function before they were taken out.
It has been demonstrated experimentally that metal amalgam dental fillings generate electrical potentials with magnitudes of up to 350 millivolts (that's more than one third of a volt), see:
book.boot.users.btopenworld.com/dutch.htm
However, it appears that experimental investigations to determine whether or not these potentials are able to dissipate electrical
energy through the nerves in people's heads have never been carried out.
Is it possible that our (and the dental profession's) ignorance in this respect is responsible for countless thousands of dentists'
patients having to suffer debilitating neurological conditions which are routinely dismissed as being "psychological" in origin, simply because the physical (i.e. electrical) nature of their real cause has not been recognised?
And that Princess Diana was simply one example of such a patient?
If this is the case then it would appear that Princess Diana had her amalgam fillings removed before they were able to cause her any significant permanent neurological injury - because afterwards her sense of well-being appears to have been fully restored. Is it possible that there are others amongst us who have not been so lucky?
Keith P Walsh
PS, if anyone knows of any verifiable documentary evidence regarding the removal of Princess Diana's amalgam fillings which is more authoritative/detailed than Stuart Ramsay's account, then I would be grateful for the reference.
*************************************************