Manataka American Indian Council
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Top 10 Fluoride Toxicity Papers of 2006
FAN Science Watch
January 22, 2007
Over the past year, many important papers on fluoride toxicity were published in
the peer-reviewed scientific literature. Since our Science-Watch bulletins were
unable to cover each of these studies when they were first published, we have
posted below a “Top 10” list which summarizes some of the most significant
papers from 2006 and early 2007.
1) National Research Council: EPA’s fluoride standards are unsafe
The National Research Council’s long-awaited review of fluoride, released in
March of 2006, was a watershed moment in the fluoride debate. The 500 page
review, which took 12 scientists over three years to produce, describes in great
detail why EPA’s purportedly “safe” drinking water standard (4 ppm) needs to be
reduced in order to protect human health (1). The report documents myriad
potential hazards from fluoride exposure, including damage to the bones, brain,
and various glands of the endocrine system. (See excerpts of NRC’s findings at:
http://www.fluoridealert.org/health/epa/nrc/excerpts.html .) According to
Dr. Bob Carton, a former risk-assessment scientist at EPA, this report “should
be the centerpiece of every discussion on fluoridation. It changes everything.”
1) National Research Council. (2006). Fluoride in Drinking Water: A Scientific
Review of EPA's Standards. National Academies Press, Washington D.C. Online at:
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/11571.html#toc
2) Harvard Study: Fluoridation associated with bone cancer in boys
In the wake of media scrutiny and an NIH ethics investigation, the first paper
from Harvard University’s ongoing study of fluoride and bone cancer was finally
published (2). The paper -- published 14 years after the study began -- reported
that boys exposed to fluoridated water had a significantly higher rate of an
often fatal form of bone cancer called osteosarcoma. According to the study, the
boys with the highest rate of osteosarcoma were those that were exposed to
fluoridated water during the ages of 6 to 8, although other years of life were
also associated with increased risk – including the first year of life. These
findings, which are consistent with a 1990 government study that reported the
same form of bone cancer in fluoride-treated rats, have resulted in a similar
degree of controversy. For example, in 1992, the top toxicologist in EPA’s
Office of Drinking Water was fired after publicly expressing concern that the
government was downplaying the study’s findings (see:
http://fluoridealert.org/media/1992a.html), while, in 2005, the principal
investigator of the Harvard study (a dental professor with ties to Colgate)
sparked a public outcry after it was revealed he had withheld the study’s
findings from federal authorities while claiming it showed no relationship
between fluoridation and bone cancer. (See:
http://fluoridealert.org/media/2006c.html ) Together, the government and
Harvard studies reveal a disturbing pattern: when it comes to fluoride and
cancer, politics can become a malignant force.
2) Bassin EB, Wypij D, Davis RB, Mittleman MA. (2006). Age-specific fluoride
exposure in drinking water and osteosarcoma (United States). Cancer Causes
and Control 17: 421-8.
3) Too much fluoride can damage the developing brain
In March, the National Research Council broke important ground by dedicating an
entire chapter of its report to the growing body of evidence indicating that
fluoride can damage the brain. According to the NRC, “it is apparent that
fluorides have the ability to interfere with the functions of the brain and the
body by direct and indirect means.” However, since we’ve already selected the
NRC report as our #1 pick, our #3 pick goes to two recent papers that add
further support to the NRC’s conclusions on fluoride’s potential to damage the
brain.
The first paper was a review, published in the esteemed medical journal The
Lancet, examining the various chemicals in today’s world that may damage a
child’s developing brain (3A). The review classified fluoride, along with the
rocket fuel additive perchlorate, as an “emerging neurotoxic substance” due to
studies linking it to brain damage in animals and lower Iqs in children.
The Lancet’s review was officially published on December 16, 2006, less than a
month before an environmental health journal in the US published a new study
demonstrating -- once again -- that high fluoride exposure can reduce children’s
IQ (3B). The study, published in Environmental Health Perspectives,
reports that groups of children exposed to 8 ppm fluoride in water have lower
average IQ’s, less children attaining high IQ, and more children affected by low
IQ. While 8 ppm is higher than the fluoride level added to water in fluoridation
programs (0.7-1.2 ppm), previous studies from China indicate that fluoride may
affect IQ at lower levels (Xiang 2003), including as low as 0.9 ppm among
children with iodine-deficiencies (Lin Fa Fu 1991).
Together, the publication of the Lancet review & the Environmental
Health Perspectives study suggest that the mainstream medical literature is
finally beginning to recognize this critically important, but previously
ignored, issue.
3A) Grandjean P, Landrigan P. (2006). Developmental neurotoxicity of industrial
chemicals. The Lancet 368: 2167-2178
3B) Wang SX, et al. (2007). Water arsenic and fluoride exposure and children’s
intelligence quotient and growth in Shanyin County, Shanxi, China.
Environmental Health Perspectives [Epub Jan 9].
4) Infant fluoride exposure linked to permanent tooth discoloration
The upper front two teeth are the most visible teeth when a person smiles. If a
baby is exposed to fluoride during the first year of their life, these two teeth
are at risk of being permanently discolored – according to a new study from the
University of Iowa (4). And the risk is not just for “baby teeth”, but for
permanent teeth as well.
According to the study, exposure to fluoride during the child’s first year of
life can cause a tooth defect, known as dental fluorosis, that won’t become
apparent until the teeth erupt 7 or 8 years later. Dental fluorosis can result
in white and/or brown staining of the teeth and sometimes corrosion of the
enamel – effects which will last the child’s entire life if cosmetic treatment
cannot be afforded.
The Iowa researchers’ findings may help explain why the American Dental
Association later warned, on November 9th, that infants should not receive
fluoridated water. The ADA’s warning did not, however, go far enough. According
to the Iowa study, the risk of developing fluorosis on the permanent teeth is
greatest for those children exposed to fluoride for each of their first four
years of life. The take home message: To avoid fluorosis on the permanent
front two teeth, keep fluoride away from children until they are at least 5
years old.
4) Hong L, Levy SM, et al. (2006). Timing of fluoride intake in relation to
development of fluorosis on maxillary central incisors. Community Dentistry
and Oral Epidemiology 34:299-309.
5) Kidney patients at risk of chronic fluoride poisoning
It’s not just infants that should avoid fluoridated water. New research provides
yet further evidence why people with kidney disease – particularly advanced
kidney disease – should be advised to avoid fluoride as well.
Because kidney patients have a reduced ability to clear fluoride from their
body, they have long been recognized to be at heightened risk of fluoride
poisoning. In 2006, new research helped to further highlight this risk.
Research from India confirmed that fluoride can cause a painful bone disease in
kidney patients (5A), while research from Poland indicated that the health risks
may extend well beyond the bones (5B). According to the Polish researchers, the
heightened body burden of fluoride that kidney patients face (as measured by
high levels of fluoride in their blood) may increase the rate of cell damage
(oxidative stress) throughout the body – making them more vulnerable to a host
of illnesses.
So, should people with kidney disease be concerned about drinking fluoridated
water? According to two new reviews, the answer is yes (5C,D). According to one
review, "Individuals with kidney disease have decreased ability to excrete
fluoride in urine and are at risk of developing fluorosis even at normal
recommended limit of 0.7 to 1.2 mg/l” (5C).
It’s time, therefore, for dental and medical organizations to start warning
kidney patients to avoid water with added fluoride. As noted by Dr. Kathleen
Thiessen, a scientist who helped author the National Research Council’s review
on fluoride: “People with kidney disease should be very concerned about drinking
fluoridated water because it does put them at a higher risk for a number of
problems.”
5A) Harinarayan CV, et al. (2006). Fluorotoxic metabolic bone disease: an osteo-renal
syndrome caused by excess fluoride ingestion in the tropics. Bone 39:
907-14.
5B) Bober J, et al. (2006). Fluoride aggravation of oxidative stress in patients
with chronic renal failure. Fluoride 39:302-309.
5C) Bansal R, Tiwari SC. (2006). Back pain in chronic renal failure.
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation 21:2331-2332.
5D) Ayoob S, Gupta AK. (2006). Fluoride in Drinking Water: A Review on the
Status and Stress Effects. Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and
Technology 36:433–487
6) Cornell scientist diagnoses fluoride poisoning in horses drinking
fluoridated water
When fluoride is added to drinking water, it’s not just humans who will consume
it. Millions of dogs, cats, and other animals will consume it as well. As we
await the publication of a national study investigating the relationship between
fluoridated water and bone cancer in dogs, a study published in 2006 provides
compelling evidence that some animals may indeed be silent victims of the
national water fluoridation program (6A,B).
For years, Cathy Justus’ horses in Pagosa Springs, Colorado, were experiencing
symptoms that, no matter what medical treatment she tried, would not go away.
The symptoms included colic (i.e. gastrointestinal pain), arthritis-like
stiffness of the bones, and skin allergies. Cathy brought her horses to multiple
veterinarians in the area, but none were able to find a cure for the horses’
problems -- that is, until she met Dr. Lennart Krook, a retired veterinary
researcher from Cornell University. Upon examining the horses, Dr Krook quickly
discovered that Cathy’s horses had dental fluorosis – a fluoride-induced
condition that created large brown stains and pits on the horses’ teeth. (None
of the previous veterinarians Cathy went to had ever bothered to examine the
horses’ teeth, and had therefore missed this important warning sign.)
Following the discovery of dental fluorosis, Dr. Krook conducted microscopic
analyses of some of the deceased horses’ bones, and found changes in the bone
structure that were consistent with skeletal fluorosis. While the horses’ bone
fluoride levels (between 600 and 900 ppm) were well below the levels typically
associated with skeletal fluorosis (in cattle), Dr. Krook concluded that the
horses were, in fact, suffering from “chronic fluoride intoxication.”
Although some have questioned Dr. Krook’s diagnosis (based on the low fluoride
levels in the horses’ bones), the owner of the horses swears by it. After her
town council voted (in March 2005) to end its water fluoridation program, the
symptoms that had plagued Cathy’s horses for nearly 20 years, began to subside –
and have not returned since. Coincidence? According to Cathy Justus, the proof
is in the pudding.
So, how many other horses are being affected in a similar manner? Dr Krook and
Cathy think this is a question horse owners would do well to consider. We agree.
6A) Krook LP, Justus CJ. (2006). Fluoride poisoning of horses from artificially
fluoridated drinking water. Fluoride 39:3-10.
6B) Justus CJ, Krook LP. (2006). Allergy in horses from artificially fluoridated
water. Fluoride 39:89-94.
7) Fluoride exposure linked to kidney damage in children
The kidney has long been recognized as a potential target of fluoride toxicity.
This is because, as noted by the National Research Council, “Human kidneys...
concentrate fluoride as much as 50-fold from plasma to urine. Portions of the
renal system may therefore be at higher risk of fluoride toxicity than most soft
tissues.”
It was of great interest, therefore, to read the results of a new study
investigating the relationship between water fluoride exposure and kidney damage
in children (7). According to the study: “our results suggest that drinking
water fluoride levels over 2.0 mg/L (ppm) can cause damage to liver and kidney
function in children.”
The authors reached this conclusion after studying a group of 210 children
living in areas of China with varying levels of fluoride in water (from 0.61 to
5.69 ppm). Among this group, the children drinking water with more than 2 ppm
fluoride – particularly those with dental fluorosis - were found to have
increased levels of NAG and y-GT in their urine, both of which are markers of
kidney damage. The children’s urine also contain increased levels of lactic
dehydrogenase – a possible indicator of liver damage.
While definitive conclusions can not be drawn from this single study, it’s
findings are consistent with previous animal studies which reported kidney
damage from fluoride exposure at levels as low as 1 ppm in rats, and 5 ppm in
monkeys. Taken together, the studies suggest that minimizing fluoride intake
could well have a positive effect on kidney health.
7) Xiong X, et al. (2007). Dose-effect relationship between drinking water
fluoride levels and damage to liver and kidney functions in children.
Environmental Research 103:112-116. (Reviewed in: American Academy of
Pediatrics (AAP) Grand Rounds; 2007; 17:7).
8) Water fluoridation linked to higher blood lead levels in children from old
homes
Can water fluoridation increase the levels of lead circulating in a child’s
blood? This is the question that has been asked ever since Dartmouth scientist,
Dr Roger Masters, and chemical engineer, Myron Coplan, published studies in 1999
and 2000 reporting that exposure to fluoridated water was associated with
increased blood lead levels in children surveyed from Massachusetts and New York
State. According to Masters and Coplan, this association was not observed for
all fluoride chemicals, but only those water supplies treated with
“silicofluorides” (e.g. fluorosilicic acid and sodium fluoride silicofluoride).
Prompted by Masters’ & Coplan’s research, a team of scientists from the
University of Maryland and Centers for Disease Control (CDC) examined the blood
lead levels of children from a recent national survey to assess if there is any
association with water fluoridation (8). In January 2006, the authors published
the results of their study in Environmental Health Perspectives. While
their findings do not neatly agree with Master’s and Coplan’s earlier studies,
they also do not rule out a relationship between fluoridation and blood lead.
Indeed, the authors report that water fluoridation is associated with
significantly higher blood lead levels among children living in houses built
prior to 1946. This is quite a striking finding as there is no shortage of
houses built prior to 1946!
Thus, while the study may add a few important nuances to Masters’ & Coplan’s
research, it is consistent with the theory that water fluoridation can increase
the level of lead in children’s blood. Considering that lead exposure during
childhood can result in permanent learning and behavioral disorders, this paper
easily deserves recognition as one of the top 10 most important papers on
fluoride of the past year.
8) Macek M, et al. (2006). Blood lead concentrations in children and method of
water fluoridation in the United States, 1988-1994. Environmental Health
Perspectives 114:130-134.
9) Dental fluorosis linked to tooth decay & psychological stress
One of the myths that has long been perpetuated about fluoride is that dental
fluorosis – no matter how severe - is simply a “cosmetic effect.” Based,
however, on the research of the past year, it appears this myth is finally on
its way out. In March, the National Research Council kicked things off by
stating that severe dental fluorosis (marked by extensive staining and pitting
of enamel) is an adverse health effect due to its ability to make teeth weaker
and prone to decay.
NRC’s conclusion was further reinforced by a study published in December in the
journal Community Dental Health (9A). The study, a national survey of children’s
teeth in Puerto Rico, found that both severe fluorosis and
moderate fluorosis are associated with increased tooth decay and/or
restorations.
The physical damage that fluorosis may cause to teeth is not, however, the only
concern. Another concern, as detailed over 20 years ago by the National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), is the psychological impact that dental
fluorosis may have on a child. The NIMH’s warning gained renewed support this
past year from a study published in Community Dentistry & Oral Epidemiology
(9B). According to the study, children with severe dental fluorosis are more
likely to be perceived by their peers as less intelligent, less attractive, less
social, less happy, less careful, less hygienic, and less reliable –
characteristics which could have major effects on a child’s self-esteem. (The
latest surveys of dental fluorosis in the US indicate that about 1% of American
children now have severe fluorosis, while about 1-3% have moderate fluorosis.)
9A) Elias-Boneta AR, et al. (2006). Relationship between dental caries
experience (DMFS) and dental fluorosis in 12-year-old Puerto Ricans.
Community Dental Health 23:244-50.
9B) Williams DM, et al. (2006). Attitudes to fluorosis and dental caries by a
response latency method. Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology
34:153-9.
10) Water fluoridation & the “Precautionary Principle”
Based on the studies from 2006 and early 2007, it is clear that fluoride
exposure – at relatively low levels – can harm human health. It has the
potential to cause bone cancer, damage the brain, damage the kidney, damage the
thyroid, damage the bones (particularly in kidney patients), increase the uptake
of lead, and damage the teeth. However, in order to fully prove and understand
the nature of these risks (including the range of doses that can cause the
effects, and how these doses vary based on environmental, genetic, and dietary
factors) more research would need to be conducted. Is it ethical, however, to
continue exposing entire populations to fluoride in their water or salt (often
against people’s will), while additional long-term studies are carried out to
clarify the risks?
That is the crux of the question posed by an insightful analysis published in
the March 2006 issue of the Journal of Evidence Based Dental Practice.
The analysis, written by Joel Tickner and Melissa Coffin, examines the water
fluoridation controversy in the context of the “precautionary principle.” The
precautionary principle has become a core guiding principle of environmental
health regulations in Europe and reflects the position that:
“if there is uncertainty, yet credible scientific evidence or concern of threats to health, precautionary measures should be taken. In other words, preventive action should be taken on early warnings even though the nature and magnitude of the risk are not fully understood.”
As noted by
Tickner & Coffin “The need for precaution arises because the costs of inaction
in the face of uncertainty can be high, and paid at the expense of sound public
health.”
In determining whether the precautionary principle should be applied to
fluoridation, the authors note that:
there are other ways of delivering fluoride besides the water supply;
fluoride does not need to be swallowed to prevent tooth decay;
tooth decay has dropped at the same rate in countries with, and without, water fluoridation;
people are now receiving fluoride from many other sources besides the water supply;
studies indicate fluoride’s potential to cause a range of adverse, systemic effects;
since fluoridation affects so many people, “one might accept a lower level of proof before taking preventive actions.”
While the
authors never state their personal opinion on water fluoridation, the issues and
questions they’ve raised certainly help to put the debate about fluoridation on
the right track.
10) Tickner J, Coffin M. (2006). What does the precautionary principle mean for
evidence-based dentistry? Journal of Evidence Based Dental Practice 6:6-15.
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