SCIENCE
WATCH Newsletter: New study
challenges old belief on dental fluorosis/tooth decay
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FAN SCIENCE-WATCH
September 27, 2004
Issue #14: New study challenges old belief on dental
fluorosis/tooth decay
By Michael Connett
A new study (1), published in the October issue of Community
Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology, has cast yet further doubt
on one of the long-standing beliefs in fluoride research. The
study, which examined tooth decay and dental
fluorosis rates in two areas of Ethiopia, found that the
two factors were related in a positive fashion. In other words,
as the severity of dental fluorosis increased, so too did the
rate of tooth
decay.
According to the authors, "Independent of the fluoride
concentration in drinking water, caries prevalence increased
consistently with increasing severity of dental fluorosis in
the second molars, first molars, premolars and canines"
(1).
Dental Fluorosis: Reducing the Mineral Content of Teeth
On the face of it, this finding isn't entirely surprising.
After all, dental
fluorosis refers to a "mineralization defect"
in teeth which results in an increased "porosity"
of the enamel (2).
"Hypoplasia", a term often used to describe the appearance
of dental fluorosis, is a condition marked by "thin enamel"
and "enamel deficiency." Mosby's Medical Dictionary
defines hypoplasia as an "incomplete or underdeveloped
organ or tissue, usually the result of a decrease in the number
of cells." See: http://tinyurl.com/438bz
and http://tinyurl.com/4kxvl
(Hypoplasia in teeth can be caused by other factors besides
fluoride, such as malnutrition in childhood. See: http://tinyurl.com/6a6z4
)
In dental fluorosis, the enamel has been found to have a "decreased
mineral content" (3), and, more specifically, a "decrease
in calcium content" (4).
In light of this decrease in mineral content, it would seem
an apparent anomaly if fluorosed teeth were actually stronger
and not weaker than normal teeth. Think for instance of bones.
If a bone becomes thinner, and more porous, one would reasonably
assume that the bone has become more prone to fracture, not
less. At the very least, one would not expect the bone to have
become stronger.
In reviewing the scientific literature on dental fluorosis,
one is tempted to make a similar assumption with fluorotic teeth
- although it‚s unclear at what stage of severity the
thinning could be significant enough to increase decay.
Similarities between Dental Fluorosis & Early Stages
of Tooth Decay?
It is interesting to note that when dental fluorosis was first
being investigated in the first half of the 20th century, several
scientists commented on the similarities between the appearance
of fluorotic teeth and teeth with the early stages of caries
(decay).
According to a 1936 review by H.T. Dean, "the histologic
picture of mottled enamel disclosed no essential difference
from that of incompletely calcified forming enamel, or enamel
showing the early stages of caries" (5).
Dean also commented on findings which indicated that "the
permeability of mottled enamel is comparable to that of... enamel
affected by caries" (5).
But, nonetheless, the view (6) that won out in the public health
community by the second half of the 20th century, is the view
that largely remains until this day: namely, that teeth with
dental fluorosis - no matter how severe - are stronger and more
resistant to decay. The orthodoxy is that "although unsightly,
these teeth rarely have any dental caries." See: http://tinyurl.com/6ccth
Recent Findings Challenge Orthodoxy
This view, however, has come under increasing scientific challenge
over the past 30 years, as other researchers, from other countries,
have begun to investigate the issue for themselves. And, contrary
to the early research from the US, this newer research has often
found that dental fluorosis makes teeth more prone, not less
prone, to tooth decay (1, 7-14).
As with the new study mentioned above (1), a 2002 study by
a research team in Sri Lanka, reported:
"caries prevalence and the mean caries experience were
significantly higher in children with (dental fluorosis) than
in those without" (7).
Similarly, a 1997 study from a team in Sudan reported:
"analyses based on children in the 2.5 ppm area alone,
showed significantly higher DMFT (Decayed, Missing, and Filled
Teeth) by increased severity of dental fluorosis" (8).
Earlier, a team from Israel ˆ in two separate papers looking
at two separate age groups (9, 10) - reported:
"A statistically significant positive association was
found between caries prevalence and fluorosis; the more caries
experienced, the more severe the fluorosis level" (10).
Earlier yet, Dr. Arvid Carlsson (a recent winner of the Nobel
Prize in Medicine) reported on findings from Sweden which showed:
" more severe degrees of enamel fluorosis are associated
with an abnormally high incidence of caries... There is thus
no doubt that a high degree of enamel fluorosis causes an
increased tendency to caries" (14).
In addition to these findings, a series of recent papers have
also reported that tooth decay rates may actually increase as
the fluoride level in the water increases (15-18). For example:
In 2002, a research team in Tanzania reported:
" subjects in the high-F (fluoride) and urban Arusha
municipality were at a significantly higher risk of dental
caries than children in the low-F (fluoride) areas" (15).
In 2001, a research team in South Africa reported:
"Significantly (P < 0.01) more children had decayed
teeth in the high F (fluoride) area than in the other two
areas. The results suggest a positive association between
high F levels in the drinking water and dental caries"
(16).
And perhaps most comprehensively, a research team in India
(summarizing 30 years of observation) reported:
"Our findings indicate that dental caries was caused
by high fluoride and low dietary calcium intakes, separately
and through their interactions. Dental caries was most severe
and complex in calcium-deficient children exposed to high
intakes of endemic fluoride in drinking water" (17).
US orthodoxy beginning to change?
While it still remains unclear from the above studies at what
stage dental fluorosis - and fluoride exposure - may weaken
teeth, it appears that at least some members of the public health
community in the United States are beginning to acknowledge
that - at least in its moderate/severe forms - dental fluorosis
may increase decay (19, 20).
According to a recent review from Steven Levy, a prominent
researcher in the US:
"With more severe forms of fluorosis, caries risk increases
because of pitting and loss
of the outer enamel" (19).
A similar statement was made in a 2003 review from the US Agency
for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR). Citing the
work of Mann (9,10) and Driscoll (11), ATSDR stated:
" In more severely fluorosed teeth, the enamel is pitted
and discolored and is prone to fracture and wear. Several
studies have found significant increases in the number of
decayed, missing, or filled tooth surfaces in children with
severe dental fluorosis" (20).
The Most Damning Blow?
Another important, and perhaps the most damning, finding for
the 'fluorosis makes teeth stronger' orthodoxy has been the
finding, now acknowledged by the Centers for Disease Control
(CDC), that fluoride incorporated within the tooth‚s enamel
does not increase a tooth‚s resistance to decay. Here,
for instance, is the most recent statement from the CDC on the
matter:
"The prevalence of dental caries in a population is
not inversely related to the concentration of fluoride in
enamel, and a higher concentration of enamel fluoride is not
necessarily more efficacious in preventing dental caries"
(21).
The significance of this concession from the CDC is that it
negates a key purported mechanism by which dental fluorosis
was assumed to reduce decay: namely, via an increased incorporation
of fluoride within the internal structure of the tooth during
the early years of life (22).
Today, of course, the notion that fluoride‚s primary
benefit comes via ingestion - and the subsequent build-up of
fluoride within the tooth - is largely refuted by the dental
research community (but less so by individual practicing dentists,
who may find it difficult to let go of notions learned in dental
school (23)). See: http://www.fluoridealert.org/health/teeth/caries/topical-systemic.html
The current consensus by the research community, as reiterated
recently by researchers Levy & Warren, is that:
" fluorides work primarily by topical means through
direct action on the teeth and dental plaque. Thus ingestion
of fluoride is not essential for caries prevention" (24).
The CDC has also acknowledged this point, stating in 1999 that:
"laboratory and epidemiologic research suggests that
fluoride prevents dental caries predominately after eruption
of the tooth into the mouth, and its actions primarily are
topical for both adults and children" (25).
Hence, fluoride's "primary benefit" is now believed
to come from direct application of fluoride to the outside of
teeth, not from accumulation within the teeth via ingestion.
Thus, a principal means by which fluorosis was believed to make
teeth stronger for life (via internal accumulation of fluoride),
is now considered mostly insignificant in protecting against
decay (21, 22, 25-26), and, based on the findings discussed
above (1, 7-18), may actually make teeth weaker instead.
See follow-up to this bulletin
--------
References:
1) Wondwossen F, et al. (2004). The relationship between dental
caries and dental fluorosis in areas with moderate- and high-fluoride
drinking water in Ethiopia. Community Dentistry and Oral
Epidemiology 32: 337-44.
2) Fejerskov O, et al. (1990). The nature and mechanisms of
dental fluorosis in man. Journal of Dental Research
69(Spec Iss): 692-700.
3) DenBesten PK, Crenshaw MA. (1984). The effects of chronic
high fluoride levels on forming enamel in the rat. Archives
of Oral Biology 29: 675-9.
4) Susheela AK, Bhatnagar M. (1999). Structural aberrations
in fluorosed human teeth: Biochemical and scanning electron
microscopic studies. Current Science 77: 1677-1680.
5) Dean HT. (1936). Chronic endemic dental fluorosis (mottled
enamel). Journal of the American Medical Association
107: 1269-1273.
6) McKay FS. (1928). Relation of mottled enamel to caries.
Journal of the American Dental Association 15:1429-37.
7) Ekanayake L, Van Der Hoek W. (2002). Dental caries and developmental
defects of enamel in relation to fluoride levels in drinking
water in an arid area of sri lanka. Caries Research
36(6):398-404.
8) Ibrahim YE, et al. (1997). Caries and dental fluorosis in
a 0.25 and a 2.5 ppm fluoride area in the Sudan. International
Journal of Paediatric Dentistry 7(3):161-6.
9) Mann J,et al. (1990). Fluorosis and dental caries in 6-8-year-old
children in a 5 ppm fluoride area. Community Dentistry and
Oral Epidemiology 18(2):77-9.
10) Mann J, et al. (1987). Fluorosis and caries prevalence
in a community drinking above-optimal fluoridated water. Community
Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology 15(5):293-5.
11) Driscoll WS, et al. (1986). Prevalence of dental caries
and dental fluorosis in areas with negligible, optimal, and
above-optimal fluoride concentrations in drinking water. Journal
of the American Dental Association 113(1):29-33.
12) Olsson B. (1979). Dental findings in high-fluoride areas
in Ethiopia. Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology
7(1):51-6.
13) Retief DH, et al. (1979). Relationships among fluoride
concentration in enamel, degree of fluorosis and caries incidence
in a community residing in a high fluoride area. Journal
of Oral Pathology 8: 224-36.
14) Carlsson A. (1978). Current problems relating to the pharmacology
and toxicology of fluorides. Journal of the Swedish Medical
Association 14: 1388-1392.
15) Awadia AK, et al. (2002). Caries experience and caries
predictors - a study of Tanzanian children consuming drinking
water with different fluoride concentrations. Clinical Oral
Investigations 6:98-103.
16) Grobleri SR, et al. (2001). Dental fluorosis and caries
experience in relation to three different drinking water fluoride
levels in South Africa. International Journal of Paediatric
Dentistry 11(5):372-9.
17) Teotia SPS, Teotia M. (1994). Dental caries: A disorder
of high fluoride and low dietary calcium interactions (30 years
of personal experience). Fluoride 27: 59-66.
18) Steelink C. (1992). Fluoridation Controversy. (Letter).
Chemical & Engineering News July 27: 2-3.
19) Levy SM. (2003). An update on fluorides and fluorosis.
Journal of the Canadian Dental Association 69: 286-91.
20) ATSDR. (2003). Toxicological profile for Fluorides, Hydrogen
Fluoride, and Fluorine. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, Public Health Service.
21) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2001). Recommendations
for Using Fluoride to Prevent and Control Dental Caries in the
United States. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
50(RR14): 1-42.
22) Burt B. (1999). The case for eliminating the use of dietary
fluoride supplements for young children. Journal of Public
Health Dentistry 59: 269-274.
23) Yoder KM. (2000). Use of fluoride: knowledge, attitudes
and behaviors of Indiana dentists and dental hygienists. Presentation
at the 128th Annual meeting of the American Public Health Association,
September 12-16, 2000. See: http://tinyurl.com/6tppn
24) Warren JJ, Levy SM. (2003). Current and future role of
fluoride in nutrition. Dental Clinics of North America
47: 225-43.
25) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (1999). Achievements
in Public Health, 1900-1999: Fluoridation of Drinking Water
to Prevent Dental Caries. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report 48: 933-940.
26) Featherstone, JDB. (2000). The Science and Practice of
Caries Prevention. Journal of the American Dental Association
131: 887-899.