FLUORIDE
ACTION NETWORK:
FLUORIDE HEALTH EFFECTS DATABASE:
Overview Page
DIRECTORY: FAN > Health
Attention MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS: Please take a moment today and sign the Professionals' Statement to End Fluoridation. To read the Professionals' Statement, click here.
NEW: Fluoride: Top 10 Scientific Developments of 2007
NEW: Dr. Ted Schettler: Re-thinking Fluoridation
NEW: New Fluoride Warning for Infants
NEW: Joint Pain? It could be fluorosis
NEW:
FAN Conference
featured in American Chemical Society magazine
NEW:
Fluoride & Human Health: An interview with Dr. Kathleen Thiessen
- FAN, July 29, 2006
NEW: Kidney
& Liver Damage found in Fluoride-Exposed Children
- FAN, July 19, 2006
NEW: Excerpts
from NRC Report on Fluoride - FAN, March 28, 2006
NEW: NRC
Delivers Wake Up Call on Fluoride - FAN, March
22, 2006
NEW: National
Academy Calls for Lowering Fluoride Limits in Tap Water -
Environmental Working Group March 22, 2005
NEW: Fluorosis
on the Rise according to new U.S. Survey - FAN
Science Watch, August 25, 2005
For FAN's background
information on Fluoride/Bone Cancer, click
here
FLUORIDE HEALTH EFFECTS DATABASE
- OVERVIEW PAGE
“Over the past ten years a large body
of peer-reviewed science has raised concerns that fluoride may
present unreasonable health risks, particularly among children,
at levels routinely added to tap water in American cities.”
ENVIRONMENTAL
WORKING GROUP, July 2005.
"In summary, we hold that fluoridation
is an unreasonable risk."
US ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
HEADQUARTERS' UNION, 2001.
“Carefully conducted studies of exposure
to fluoride and emerging health parameters of interest (e.g.,
endocrine effects and brain
function) should be performed in populations in the United
States exposed to various concentrations of fluoride.”
US NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL,
2006
"I am quite convinced that water fluoridation,
in a not-too-distant future, will be consigned to medical history."
Dr.
ARVID CARLSSON, Pharmacologist, Nobel
Laureate in Physiology and Medicine, 2000.
| FLUORIDE
ACCIDENTS & POISONINGS (Click for more detail)
Fluoride, the active ingredient in many
pesticides
and rodenticides, is a powerful poison - more
acutely poisonous than lead. Because of this, accidental
over-ingestion of fluoride can cause serious toxic symptoms.
Each year there are thousands of reports
to Poison Control
centers in the United States related to excessive ingestion
of fluoride toothpastes, mouthrinses, and supplements.
Water
fluoridation accidents, resulting in excess levels of
fluoride in water, have been one of the sources of acute
fluoride poisoning.
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Excessive
ingestion of fluoride during the early childhood years can
damage the tooth-forming
cells, leading to a defect in the enamel known as dental
fluorosis.
Teeth impacted by fluorosis have visible discoloration,
ranging from white spots
to brown
and black stains.
According to the Centers for Disease
Control, 32% of American children now have some form
of dental fluorosis, with 2 to 4% of children having the
moderate to severe stages (CDC 2005).
According to Dr.
Hardy Limeback, Head of Preventive Dentistry at the
University of Toronto, "it is
illogical to assume that tooth enamel is the only tissue
affected by low daily doses of fluoride ingestion.
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The
kidneys play a vital role
in preventing the build-up of excessive fluoride in the
body. Among healthy individuals, the kidneys excrete approximately
50% of the daily fluoride intake. However, among individuals
with kidney disease, the kidneys' ability to excrete becomes
markedly impaired, resulting in a build-up
of fluoride within the body.
It is well recognized that individuals with kidney disease
have a heightened susceptibility
to the cumulative toxic effects of fluoride.
Of particular concern is the potential for fluoride, when
accumulated in the skeletal system, to cause, or exacerbate,
renal
osteodystrophy - a bone disease commonly found among
people with advanced kidney disease.
In addition, fluoride has been definitively shown to poison
kidney function at high doses over short-term exposures
in both animals and humans. The impact of low doses of fluoride,
given over long periods of time, has been inadequately studied.
A recent animal study, conducted by scientists at the US
Environmental Protection Agency (Varner 1998), reported
that exposure to just 1
ppm fluoride caused kidney damage in rats if they drank
the water for an extended period of time, while a new
study from China found an increased rate of kidney disease
among humans consuming more than 2 ppm (Liu 2005). Hence,
the adverse effects to kidney function that fluoride causes
at high doses over short periods of time, may also be replicated
with small doses
if consumed over long periods of time.
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| FLUORIDE
& the BRAIN (Click for more
detail)
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In
the 1990s, it was discovered that the pineal gland is a
major site of fluoride accumulation within
the body - with higher concentrations of fluoride than
either teeth or bone.
Subsequent animal studies
indicate that the accumulation of fluoride in the pineal
gland can reduce the gland's synthesis of melatonin,
a hormone that helps regulate the onset of puberty. Fluoride-treated
animals were found to have reduced levels of circulating
melatonin and an earlier onset of puberty than untreated
animals. The scientist who conducted the research
concluded:
"The safety of the use of fluorides ultimately rests
on the assumption that the developing
enamel organ is most sensitive to the toxic effects
of fluoride. The results from this study suggest that the
pinealocytes may be as susceptible
to fluoride as the developing enamel organ" (Luke 1997).
The fact that fluoride's impact on the pineal gland was
never studied, or even considered, before
the 1990s, highlights a major
gap in knowledge underpinning current policies on fluoride
and health.
According to the US National
Research Council, "any agent
that affects pineal function could affect human health in
a variety of ways, including effects on sexual maturation,
calcium metabolism, parathyroid function, postmenopausal
osteoporosis, cancer, and psychiatric disease.”
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| FLUORIDE
& the THYROID GLAND
(Click for more detail)
According
to the US National Research
Council, "several lines of information indicate
an effect of fluoride exposure on thyroid function"
- particularly among individuals with an iodine deficiency.
Fluoride's potential to impair thyroid function is most
clearly illustrated by the fact that -- up until the 1970s
-- European doctors used fluoride as a thyroid-suppressing
medication for patients with hyperthyroidism (over-active
thyroid). Fluoride was utilized because it was found effective
at reducing the activity of
the thyroid gland - even at doses as low as 2 mg/day.
Today, many people living in fluoridated communities are
ingesting doses of fluoride (1.6-6.6 mg/day) that fall within
the range of doses (2 to 10 mg/day) once used by doctors
to reduce thyroid activity in hyperthyroid patients. This
is of particular concern
considering the widespread problem of hypothyroidism
(under-active thyroid) in the United States. Symptoms of
hypothyroidism include obesity, lethargy, depression, and
heart disease.
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| FLUORIDE
& BONE DISEASE (Click
for more detail)
Excessive
exposure to fluoride is well known to cause a bone disease
called skeletal fluorosis.
Skeletal fluorosis, especially in its early
stages, is a difficult
disease to diagnose, and can be readily confused with
various forms of arthritis
including osteoarthritis
and rheumatoid
arthritis.
In its advanced stages, fluorosis can resemble a multitude
of bone/joint diseases.
In individuals with kidney disease, fluoride exposure can
contribute to, and/or exacerbate, renal
osteodystrophy.
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| FLUORIDE
& BONE FRACTURE (Click
for more detail)
The
majority of animal
studies investigating fluoride's effect on bone strength,
have found fluoride to either have no effect or a negative
effect on strength. According to the US
National Research Council, "The weight of evidence
indicates that, although fluoride might increase bone volume,
there is less strength per unit volume."
Studies on human populations
consuming fluoride in drinking water have found an association
between dental
fluorosis and increased bone
fracture in children; and between long-term consumption
of fluoridated water and increased
hip fracture in the elderly.
Carefully conducted human
clinical trials - including two "double-blind trials"
- have found that fluoride (at doses of 18-34 mg/day for
just 1-4 years) increases the rate of bone fracture, particularly
hip fracture, among osteoporosis patients.
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| FLUORIDE
& CANCER (Click for more detail)
According
to the National Toxicology Program, "the
preponderance of evidence" from laboratory 'in
vitro' studies indicates that fluoride is a mutagenic
compound. Many substances which cause mutagenic damage
also cause cancer.
While the concentrations of fluoride causing mutagenic
damage in laboratory studies are higher than the concentrations
found in human blood, there are certain "microenvironments"
in the body (e.g. the
bones and the bladder)
where the concentrations of fluoride can accumulate
to levels comparable to, or in excess of, those causing
mutagenic effects in the laboratory.
Fluoride has been found to cause bone
cancer (osteosarcoma) in government animal
studies and rates of osteosarcoma among young males
living in fluoridated
areas have been found to be higher than young males
living in unfluoridated areas. Osteosarcoma, while rare,
is a very serious cancer. Children who develop osteosarcoma
face a high probability of death (usually within 3 years)
or amputation.
Fluoride exposure has also been linked to bladder
cancer - particularly among workers
exposed to excess fluoride in the workplace. According to
the US National Research Council, “further research
on a possible effect of fluoride on bladder cancer risk
should be conducted.”
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Among people hypersensitive
to fluoride, gastrointestinal ailments have been produced
following ingestion of 1 mg tablets
of fluoride or consumption of 1 ppm
fluoridated water.
A single ingestion of as little as 3
mg of fluoride, in carefully
controlled clinical trials, has been found to produce
damage to the gastric mucosa in healthy adult volunteers.
No research on the gastric mucosa has ever been conducted
to determine the effect of lower doses with repeated exposure.
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According
to the current consensus view of the dental research community,
fluoride's primary - if not sole - benefit to teeth comes
from TOPICAL
application to the exterior surface of teeth, not from
ingestion.
Perhaps not surprisingly, therefore, tooth decay rates
have declined at similar rates in all
western countries in the latter half of the 20th century
- irrespective of whether
the country fluoridates its water or not. Today, tooth
decay rates throughout continental
western Europe are as low as the tooth decay rates
in the United States - despite a profound disparity in water
fluoridation prevalence in the two regions.
Within countries that fluoridate their water, recent
large-scale surveys of dental health - utilizing modern
scientific methods not employed in the early surveys from
the 1930s-1950s - have found little
difference in tooth decay, including "baby
bottle tooth decay", between fluoridated and unfluoridated
communities.
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