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Fluoride & Oxidative Stress: Yet more evidence
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FAN SCIENCE-WATCH
September 30, 2004
Issue #17: Fluoride & Oxidative Stress: Yet
more evidence
By Michael Connett
Lo and behold, shortly after sending out yesterday’s
bulletin on fluoride & oxidative stress, I received
the latest issue of the excellent quarterly journal FLUORIDE
(2004; volume 37, issue 2). In this latest issue, there are
a number of new studies (1-4) very relevant to the discussion
of fluoride and oxidative stress.
Of particular interest was a study by Dr NJ Chinoy and colleagues
from India, looking at fluoride and arsenic’s impact on
the brain of mice (1).
As with Dr. Guan’s team at the
Karolinska Institute (5, 6), and other researchers (7-12), Chinoy’s
team found that fluoride increased the level of oxidative stress
in brains of the fluoride-treated animals (1). The three main
findings of the study were:
- Fluoride treatment decreased the level of anti-oxidant enzymes
in the brain (e.g. catalase, GSH-PX and SOD). Anti-oxidant
enzymes provide the body a natural defense against oxidative
stress.
- Fluoride treatment increased the level of lipid peroxidation
in the brain. Lipid peroxidation is an indicator of oxidative
stress.
- These toxic effects were reduced by simultaneous treatment
with antioxidant vitamins (vitamins C and E).
A possible connection with fluoride’s impact
on Pineal
Gland?
While not discussed by Chinoy (1), nor the other research teams
investigating this issue (5-12), it is conceivable that some
of the increased oxidative stress observed in fluoride-treated
animals is related to fluoride’s impact on the pineal
gland.
As was brought to light by a 1997 PhD
dissertation from Jennifer Luke (from the University of
Surrey in England) the pineal gland is a major magnet for fluoride
accumulation within the body (13, 14). The heightened vulnerability
of the pineal gland lies in the fact that it contains small
crystals of a substance known as hydroxyapatite (the same substance
found in bone and well known to accumulate fluoride). This is
significant because the pineal gland, which is not protected
by the blood brain barrier, has a very high perfusion rate of
blood – hence the hydroxyapatite crystals within the pineal
gland are continually exposed to fluoride circulating in the
bloodstream.
Based on these factors, Luke hypothesized in the mid-1990s
that the pineal gland would in fact be a target for fluoride
accumulation. To test this hypothesis she analyzed the fluoride
content of pineal glands taken from 11 human cadavers in England.
Sure enough, when she conducted the analysis, she found very
high – an average of 9000 parts per million (ppm) and
up to 21,000 ppm! – levels of fluoride in the crystals
of the gland (13, 14). Luke’s work was a breakthrough
because prior to her analysis this fact had never before been
known, if even considered.
But that’s only half the story. The other half involves
the animal research that Luke conducted after finding the high
levels in humans. Naturally, Luke was interested to find out
what this high level of accumulation within the pineal gland
may be doing to the functioning of this tiny, yet important,
gland. In research Luke later conducted on mongolian gerbils
(13), she found that fluoride exposure reduced the levels of
melatonin in the gerbils (as measured by the metabolites of
melatonin in the gerbils’ urine).
Melatonin, a hormone that regulates many activities within
the body, including potentially the onset of puberty (15), is
regulated in part by the pineal gland. Hence, Luke’s animal
findings suggested that the fluoride accumulation within the
gland, may in fact be interfering with the gland’s function
- in particular its regulation of melatonin.
So, how does this potentially relate to the issue of oxidative
stress in the brain?
Of melatonin’s many functions, one of it’s most
important may be it’s role as a powerful anti-oxidant
for the brain and other tissues - to help ward off and reduce
oxidative stress (16-19). Thus, anything which can reduce the
melatonin level in the body, would – by logical deduction
– be expected to reduce the body’s defense against
oxidative stress in the brain.
The potential significance of this can be glimpsed in the following
statement from a recent review (18) concerning melatonin’s
anti-oxidant’s properties:
“Since melatonin, the hormone secreted from the pineal
gland has a remarkable anti-oxidant property and whose rate
of production declines with increase in age, has prompted
many to suggest that this hormone plays a crucial role in
the genesis of neurodegenerative diseases.”
Of course, I am engaging in conjecture here, but the fluoride/pineal/oxidative
stress connection may well be worth examining in future research.
Can fluoride indeed reduce melatonin levels (13), and if so,
is this related to a subsequent increase in oxidative stress?
If yes, to what extent has this factor been involved in the
repeatedly observed relationship (1, 4, 6, 7-12, 20-33) between
fluoride and oxidative stress, both in animals and in humans?
References:
1) Chinoy NJ, et al. (2004). Biochemical effects of sodium
fluoride and arsenic trioxide toxicity and their reversal in
the brain of mice. Fluoride 37: 80-87.
2) Jhala DD, et al. (2004). Reversible toxicity of fluoride
and arsenic in ovary of mice. Fluoride 37: 71-79.
3) Nair SB, et al. (2004). Beneficial effects of certain antidotes
in mitigating fluoride and/or arsenic induced hepatoxicity in
mice. Fluoride 37: 60-70.
4) Wang A, et al. (2004). Antagonistic effect of selenium on
oxidative stress, DNA damage, and apoptosis induced by fluoride
in human hepatocytes. Fluoride 37: 107-116.
5) Shan KR, et al. (2004). Decreased nicotinic receptors in
PC12 cells and rat brains influenced by fluoride toxicity-a
mechanism relating to a damage at the level in post-transcription
of the receptor genes. Toxicology 200: 169-77.
6) Guan ZZ, et al (1998). Influence of chronic fluorosis on
membrane lipids in rat brain. Neurotoxicology and Teratology
20: 537-542.
7) Shen X, Zhang Z, Xu X. (2004). [Influence of combined iodine
and fluoride on phospholipid and fatty acid composition in brain
cells of rats]. Wei Sheng Yan Jiu. 33(2):158-61.
8) Shivarajashankara YM , et al. (2002). Brain lipid peroxidation
and antioxidant systems of young rats in chronic fluoride intoxication.
Fluoride 35: 197-203.
9) Lakshmi Vani M, Pratap Reddy K. (2000). Effects of fluoride
accumulation on some enzymes of brain and gastrocnemius muscle
of mice. Fluoride 33: 17-26.
10) Shao Q, et al. (2000). [Influence of free radical inducer
on the level of oxidative stress in brain of rats with fluorosis].
Zhonghua Yu Fang Yi Xue Za Zhi 34(6):330-2.
11) Wang Y, et al. (1997). [Changes of coenzyme Q content in
brain tissues of rats with fluorosis]. Zhonghua Yu Fang
Yi Xue Za Zhi. 31: 330-3.
12) Shashi A. (1992). Studies on alterations in brain lipid
metabolism following experimental fluorosis. Fluoride 25(2):77-84.
13) Luke J. (1997). The Effect of Fluoride on the Physiology
of the Pineal Gland. Ph.D. Thesis. University of Surrey, Guildord.
14) Luke J. (2001). Fluoride deposition in the aged human pineal
gland. Caries Research 35:125-128.
15) Reiter RJ. (1998). Melatonin and human reproduction. Annals
of Medicine 30: 103-8.
16) Kaptanoglu E, et al. (2003). Different responsiveness of
central nervous system tissues to oxidative conditions and to
the antioxidant effect of melatonin. Journal of Pineal Research
34: 32-5.
17) Ortega-Gutierrez S, et al. (2002). Melatonin improves deferoxamine
antioxidant activity in protecting against lipid peroxidation
caused by hydrogen peroxide in rat brain homogenates. Neuroscience
Letters 323: 55-9.
18) Srinivasan V. (2002). Melatonin oxidative stress and neurodegenerative
diseases. Indian Journal of Experimental Biology 40:
668-79.
19) Cabrer J, et al. (2001). Autoxidation and toxicant-induced
oxidation of lipid and DNA in monkey liver: reduction of molecular
damage by melatonin. Pharmacology and Toxicology 89:
225-30.
20) Shanthakumari D, et al. (2004). Effect of fluoride intoxication
on lipid peroxidation and antioxidant status in experimental
rats. Toxicology 204: 219-28.
21) Inkielewicz I, Krechniak J. (2004). Fluoride effects on
glutathione peroxidase and lipid peroxidation in rats. Fluoride
37: 7-12.
22) Shen X, Zhang Z, Xu X. (2004). [Influence of combined iodine
and fluoride on phospholipid and fatty acid composition in brain
cells of rats]. Wei Sheng Yan Jiu. 33(2):158-61.
23) Guo X, et al. (2003). Oxidative stress from fluoride induced
hepatotoxicity in rats. Fluoride 36: 25-29.
24) Shivarajashankara YM, et al. (2003). Lipid peroxidation
and antioxidant systems in the blood of young rats subjected
to chronic fluoride toxicity. Indian Journal of Experimental
Biology 41: 857-60.
25) Wang A, et al. (2003). Effects of selenium and fluoride
on apoptosis and lipid perioxidation in human hepatocytes. Fluoride
36: 45-46.
26) Yur F, et al. (2003). Changes in erthrocyte parameters
of fluorotic sheep. Fluoride 36: 152-156.
27) Ghosh D, et al. (2002). Testicular toxicity in sodium fluoride
treated rats: association with oxidative stress. Reproductive
Toxicolology 16(4):385.
28) Shivashankara AR, et al. (2002). Lipid peroxidation and
antioxidant defense systems in liver of rats in chronic fluoride
toxicity. Bulletin of Environmetnal Contamination and Toxicology
68: 612-6.
29) Shivashankara YM, et al. (2001). Oxidative stress in children
with endemic skeletal fluorosis. Fluoride 34: 103-107.
30) Shivashankara YM, et al. (2001). Effect of fluoride intoxication
on lipid peroxidation and antioxidant systems in rats. Fluoride
34: 108-113.
31) Guan ZZ, et al. (2000). Changed cellular membrane lipid
composition and lipid peroxidation of kidney in rats with chronic
fluorosis. Archives of Toxicology 74: 602-8.
32) Wang YN, et al. (2000). Effect of long term fluoride exposure
on lipid composition in rat liver. Toxicology 146:
161-9.
33) Guan ZZ, et al. (1989). An experimental study of blood
biochemical diagnostic indices for chornic fluorosis. Fluoride
22: 112-128.