SCIENCE
WATCH Newsletter: Recent Study on Fluoride
& Elk Makes Headlines
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FAN SCIENCE-WATCH
February 27, 2004
Bulletin #3: Recent Study on Fluoride & Elk
Makes Headlines
by Michael Connett
Editor, FAN Science Watch
As some of you may know, a recent study on fluoride and elk
has been attracting quite a bit of media attention recently.
The study, published in the journal Ecosystems by
scientists at Montana State University, looked at the effects
of excess fluoride on the lifespan of elk in Yellowstone National
Park.
As described by the Associated
Press (Feb 13, 2004):
“For some elk in Yellowstone National Park, exposure
to excess fluoride while they are young can actually take
years off their lives, a researcher says.
Bob Garrott, a professor in the ecology department at Montana
State University in Bozeman, said that elk that stay in the
west-central portion of the park - the area that's home to
assorted hot pools and geysers - seem to die at least five
years earlier than elk that live elsewhere in the park.
The reason, he said Thursday, is fluoride - specifically,
too much of it.
While a little fluoride is good for teeth, exposure to too
much of it - particularly at a young age when permanent teeth
are forming - affects the enamel of the elks' teeth and makes
them wear out faster, Garrott said. That accelerates the aging
process and may even leave more adult elk susceptible to predation,
especially by wolves, he said."
When I first read the press
release discussing this study, I couldn’t help but
think of the recent work from Drs Horst and Uwe Kierdorf of
Germany.
The Kierdorfs
Over the past 15 years, Dr. Horst and Uwe Kierdorf have been
conducting extremely interesting research on fluoride pollution’s
impact on deer (see list of studies below).
The Kierdorfs’ research on fluoride falls into two general
categories.
On the one hand, the Kierdorfs have used deer as biomarkers
with which to gauge the extent and distribution of industrial
fluoride pollution - as a function of both geography and time.
Using the severity of dental fluorosis or the accumulation of
fluoride in deer’s teeth, antlers and bone, the Kierdorfs
have been able to elucidate areas of intense fluoride pollution
(e.g. The Czech-German border downwind of the most notorious
coal-burning region in Europe), and also elucidate historic
trends in fluoride pollution (which makes for some very interesting
reading).
The other focus of the Kierdorfs’ work has been to study
how the fluoride pollution is actually impacting the deer.
Not surprisingly, the Kierdorfs' findings concerning the deer’s
teeth are very much consistent with the recent findings from
Montana.
In 1996, the Kierdorfs described the teeth of deer downwind
of the Czech coal industry, noting "a reduction in height
or complete loss of the enamel ridges”, “diminished
enamel hardness”, “a moderately to grossly increased
wear of the cheek teeth [which] eventually led to severe dental
disfigurement and loss of a functional tooth shape,” while
“In the two most severe cases, periodontal breakdown was
so extensive that individual teeth had been lost."
And, with great relevance to the recent Montana study, the
Kierdorfs concluded that: "In a free-ranging ruminant like
the red deer, loss of a functional tooth shape as was demonstrated
in our material will inevitably lead to a more or less intense
fitness reduction." (An intense fitness reduction, caused
by loss of tooth function, is believed to be the key factor
in the Yellowstone Elk’s short lifespan.)
What about the Bones?
Of potentially greater interest, however, are the Kierdorfs'
findings on how fluoride impacts the deer’s bone, particularly
the antlers. (Unfortunately, the recent Montana study does not
appear to have examined this aspect of the problem.)
In 2 studies from 1997 and 2000, the Kierdorfs examined the
quality of antler bone in deer downwind of fluoride polluting
industries. In both studies, the Kierdorfs found that fluoride
reduced the mineral content and density of the antler
bone. The Kierdorfs concluded that antler bone – because
of its rapid rate of mineralization (it is formed in less than
a year) – is particularly susceptible to fluoride induced
toxicity. To quote:
"It is concluded that increased fluoride exposure of
deer leads to reduced mineral content and mineral density
of antler bone and that it is the rapidity of their growth
and mineralization that makes antlers especially susceptible
to fluoride action” (Kierdorf 1997).
There are many interesting things to say about the potential
relevance of the Kierdorfs’ bone findings to humans (and
we will discuss these in a follow-up bulletin), however, for
now, we’ll just focus on the implications of their findings
to deer.
After finding that fluoride reduced the mineral content and
density of antlers, the Kierdorfs noted:
"It is likely that the bone changes induced by fluoride
will lead to an impaired
biomechanical competence of antlers... We, therefore,
would expect to find an increased incidence of antler breakage
in such populations. The only other study on the effect of
pollutants on antler quality so far has been the one by Jop
(1979) on roe deer from a forest region in South Poland. He
found that between 1922 and 1973 average antler weight in
the deer had declined by 32% and argued that this was due
to contamination from a large iron and steel works opened
in the vicinity of the forest in 1957. As was later shown
by Grodzinska et al. (1983), this forest area is in fact exposed
to an increased deposition of various pollutants, including
a high fluoride fallout" (Kierdorf 1997).
The Kierdorfs’ suggestion that fluoride, by reducing
mineral content and density, could cause an increase in antler
fracture, was a timely one.
Fluoride & Antler Fractures in Colorado
For, at about the same time that the Kierdorfs were conducting
their research, observations began to arise near a US military
base in Colorado Springs, Colorado, that deer in the vicinity
of the base were experiencing an unusual number of antler fractures.
When a group of scientists from Virginia Tech University examined
the deer, they found that – in addition to a high rate
of tooth lesions – the deer had a remarkably high level
of fluoride in their teeth and bones. The researchers noted
that the “Fluoride content of bone and tooth tissues were
considerably greater than those of deer species from reference
sites in other areas where fluoride contamination was a problem.”
See: http://www.cnr.vt.edu/fisheries/scanlon.htm
With this finding in hand, the scientists began a project to
determine the relationship between the antlers’ strength
and fluoride content. However, as I have recently learned from
some faculty at Virginia Tech, this project is no longer being
conducted, as the lead scientist, Patrick F. Scanlon, passed
away in March of 2003.
Other animal studies – including a comprehensive series
of rat and rabbit studies from the 1990s (Turner et al) –
have of course repeatedly found that fluoride reduces
bone strength . As Dr. Charles Turner, the Director of Orthopedic
Research at the University of Indiana, wrote in 1996:
"[O]ne cannot help but be alarmed by the negative effects
of fluoride on bone strength consistently demonstrated in
animal models... [M]any fluoride treatment regimens have been
studied in animals, and I know of only two animal studies
that have shown fluoride to increase bone strength... In all
other studies, fluoride has either had no effect on bone strength
or significantly decreased it."
Hence, when considering the findings of the Kierdorfs, and
when considering the multiple
animal studies reporting reduced bone strength, and the
larger body of research on livestock fluorosis (see: http://www.fluoridealert.org/f-deer.htm
), it will be interesting to see if the Montana scientists expand
their focus to include an examination of the elk’s antlers
and bones. For, as common sense alone should indicate, if fluoride
is causing the deer’s teeth to erode and fall out, it
is probable that bone damage – not to mention some soft
tissue damage – is occurring as well. It will be interesting
to gauge if, and to what extent, these non-tooth factors are
contributing to the early mortality.
---------------------
See also:
New
York State Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation’s Press Release
on Montana Study
---------------------
Bibliography of the Kierdorfs’ research:
Kierdorf U, Kierdorf H. (2003). Temporal variation of fluoride
concentration in antlers of roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) living
in an area exposed to emissions from iron and steel industry,
1948-2000. Chemosphere 52:1677-81.
Kierdorf U, Kierdorf H. (2002). Assessing regional variation
of environmental fluoride concentrations in western Germany
by analysis of antler fluoride content in roe deer (Capreolus
capreolus). Archives of Environmental Contamination and
Toxicology 42: 99-104.
Kierdorf U, Kierdorf H. (2001). Fluoride concentrations in
antler bone of roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) indicate decreasing
fluoride pollution in an industrialized area of western Germany.
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 20: 1507-1510.
Kierdorf H, Kierdorf U, Richards A, Sedlacek F. (2000). Disturbed
enamel formation in wild boars (Sus scrofa) from fluoride polluted
areas in Central Europe. Anatomical Record 259: 12-24.
Kierdorf U, Kierdorf H. (2000). The fluoride content of antlers
as an indicator of fluoride exposure in red deer (Cervus elaphus):
A historical biomonitoring study. Archives of Environmental
Contamination and Toxicology 38: 121-127.
Kierdorf U, Kierdorf H. (2000). Roe deer antlers as monitoring
units for assessing temporal changes in environmental pollution
by fluoride and lead in a German forest area over a 67-year
period. Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology
39: 1-6.
Kierdorf U, Kierdorf H. (2000). Temporal and geographical variation
in skeletal fluoride content of roe deer (Capreolus capreolus)
from industrialized areas in Germany. Comparative Biochemistry
and Physiology Part C 126: 61-68.
Kierdorf U, Kierdorf H, & Boyde A. (2000). Structure and
mineralisation density of antler and pedicle bone in red deer
(Cervus elaphus .) exposed to different levels of environmental
fluoride: a quantitative backscattered electron imaging study.
Journal of Anatomy 196: 71-83.
Kierdorf H, Kierdorf H, Sedlacek F. (1999). Monitoring regional
fluoride pollution in the Saxonian Ore mountains (Germany) using
the biomarker dental fluorosis in roe deer (Capreolus capreolus
L.) The Science of the Total Environment 232: 159-168.
Kierdorf U, Richards A, Sedlacek F, Kierdorf H. (1997). Fluoride
content and mineralization of red deer (Cervus elaphus ) antlers
and pedicles from fluoride polluted and uncontaminated regions.
Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 32:
222-227.
Kierdorf H, et al. (1996). Mandibular bone fluoride levels
and occurrence of fluoride induced dental lesions in populations
of wild deer (Cervus elaphus) from central Europe. Environmental
Pollution 93: 75-81.
Kierdorf U, Kierdorf H, Sedlacek F, Fejerskov O. (1996). Structural
changes in fluorosed dental enamel of red deer (Cervus elaphus
L.) from a region with severe environmental pollution by fluorides.
Journal of Anatomy 188: 183-195.