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Skeletal Fluorosis
in the U.S.
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FAN SCIENCE-WATCH
January 27, 2005
Issue #20: Skeletal Fluorosis in the U.S.
By Michael Connett
A new
study, documenting a case of skeletal
fluorosis from excessive tea consumption in the United
States, made headlines
in the press this week. The study, authored by a team of researchers
at Washington University School of Medicine in Missouri, was
published in the January issue of the American Journal of Medicine
(1).
In the concluding paragraph of the study, the authors write:
“Our concern is that skeletal fluorosis might result
from drinking instant teas, especially when excessive volumes
in hot environments or extra-strength preparations are consumed,
or when fluoridated or fluoride-contaminated water is used.”
The subject of the authors’ study is a 52-year old woman
from St. Louis. The cause of the woman’s fluorosis appears
two-fold: On one hand, she consumed well water with 2.8 ppm
fluoride, and on the other hand, she drank up to 1-2 gallons
per day of iced tea.
After learning of the woman’s high tea consumption, the
authors analyzed the levels of fluoride in various types of
instant tea. They found that levels ranged from 1 ppm to 6.5
ppm. The latter value, found in a sample of Lipton’s Instant
Tea, exceeds the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s
Maximum Contaminant Level for fluoride (4 ppm).
The resulting skeletal fluorosis that the woman developed from
drinking well-water and instant tea, caused bone and joint pain
throughout her body – not just in the spine where the
bone changes were most advanced. The bone and joint pains included
“neck and scapular pain and elbow and knee arthralgias.”
Perhaps the most revealing finding of the study, however, is
the following:
Between 1993 and 1998, the woman went to several doctors to
find out what might be causing the stiffness and pain in her
back. The doctors took x-rays of her spine and found evidence
of “marked osteosclerosis.” However, the doctors
failed to diagnose her condition as fluorosis. Instead, they
said she suffered from “disc disease.”
It wasn’t until the woman consulted Dr. Michael Whyte
in 1998, that the correct diagnosis of skeletal fluorosis was
made.
The history of misdiagnosis which the woman experienced –
despite having rather marked changes in her spine - raises the
question of how many other people in the U.S.,
particularly those with less obvious bone changes, have been
similarly misdiagnosed.
Many independent scientists that have examined the scientific
literature on skeletal fluorosis have raised a similar concern
(2-6).
In light of the new study on skeletal fluorosis in the U.S.,
I have compiled the following series of statements from scientists
warning of the probability that skeletal fluorosis is occurring
in some individuals, but is being misdiagnosed as one of a series
of other bone/joint diseases (e.g. osteoarthritis;
spondylosis;
renal
osteodystrophy; and Diffuse
Idiopathic Skeletal Hyperostosis).
"Our case report illustrates dramatically that
fluorosis can lead to severe disability while closely mimicking
a wide variety of other disorders... We believe increased
awareness of this unusual disease is needed to enable physicians
to make the proper diagnosis." (2)
"Although skeletal fluorosis has been studied intensely
in other countries for more than 40 years, virtually
no research has been done in the U.S. to determine how many
people are afflicted with the earlier stages of the disease,
particularly the preclinical stages. Because some of the clinical
symptoms mimic arthritis, the first two clinical phases of
skeletal fluorosis could be easily misdiagnosed [as arthritis]...
Even if a doctor is aware of the disease, the early stages
are difficult to diagnose.” (3)
"It should also be noted that chronic fluorosis
is not easily diagnosed, and that few physicians have ever
seen a case. Three of the cases reported in the U.S.
literature were not diagnosed until post-mortem examination
revealed excessive fluoride content in the bone. It
is possible that the disease may be occurring to some extent
without having been recognized." (4)
"It is quite possible that many cases of (skeletal
fluorosis) have gone misdiagnosed and unreported over the
years... The state of knowledge among practicing physicians,
even those in non-fluoride areas, concerning the diagnosis
of skeletal fluorosis seems to be deficient and should be
more carefully assessed." (5)
"Symptoms of fluoride poisoning are actually common
in this country. The question is not at all whether they occur,
but when and how often they are produced by fluoride...
It is true that reports (of skeletal fluorosis in the U.S.)
are few. This is both the cause and the effect of the fact
that physicians, by and large, are unaware that such a thing
exists. It is hardly mentioned in the textbooks or in the
medical literature." (6)
"One common feature of the three manifestations
of chronic fluorine intoxication is that isolated cases may
be difficult to diagnose." (7)
###
References:
(1) Whyte MP, Essmyer KE, Gannon FH, Reinus WR. (2005). Skeletal
fluorosis and instant tea. American Journal of Medicine 118(1):78-82.
(2) Fisher RL, et al. (1989). Endemic fluorosis with spinal
cord compression. A case report and review. Archives of Internal
Medicine 149: 697-700.
(3) Hileman B. (1988). Fluoridation of water: Questions about
health risks and benefits remain after more than 40 years. Chemical
and Engineering News August 1, 1988, 26-42.
(4) Groth, E. (1973), Two Issues of Science and Public Policy:
Air Pollution Control in the San Francisco Bay Area, and Fluoridation
of Community Water Supplies. Ph.D. Dissertation, Department
of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, May 1973.
(5) Prival MJ. (1972). Fluorides and human health. Center for
Science in the Public Interest, Washington D.C.
(6) Exner FB. (1957). Fallacies of the fluoridation thesis.
In: J Rorty, ed. (1957). The American Fluoridation Experiment.
Delvin-Adair Co, New York. pp. 29-153.
(7) Roholm K. (1937). Fluoride intoxication: a clinical-hygienic
study with a review of the literature and some experimental
investigations. London: H.K. Lewis Ltd.
Media reports on Study:
“Harmful Fluoride Levels Found in Instant Iced Tea”
- FOX News/WebMD, January 26, 2005. See: http://www.fluoridealert.org/news/2164.html
“Tea-drinking habit led to rare bone disease” -
St. Louis Dispatch, January 26, 2005. See: http://www.fluoridealert.org/news/2166.html
“Potentially harmful fluoride levels found in some instant
teas” - Press Release from Washington University School
of Medicine, January 25, 2005. See: http://www.fluoridealert.org/news/2163.html