SCIENCE
WATCH Newsletter
Fluoride: “No Convincing Effect”
on Permanent Teeth
DIRECTORY:
FAN
>
Health
>
Newsletter
> Issue # 21
FAN SCIENCE-WATCH
February 4, 2005
Issue #21: Fluoride: “No Convincing Effect”
on Permanent Teeth
By Michael Connett
A team of European researchers have put fluoride to the test
– and fluoride (devoid of anecdotal ‘evidence’
from enthusiastic dentists) appears to have flunked. This according
to a new study published in the January 2005 issue of the journal
Biostatistics (1).
The research team, comprised of scientists from Belgium and
Finland, sought to answer the question: “Does fluoride-intake
at a young age have a protective effect on caries in permanent
teeth?”
To answer the question, they utilized data from one of the
most detailed studies (“the Signal Tandmobiel study”)
of dental health currently available (2).
According to the authors, “to our knowledge, the Signal
Tandmobiel trial is possibly the largest longitudinal study
executed with such great detail on dental aspects.”
For their analysis (a “Bayesian survival analysis”),
the authors utilized dental fluorosis as the measure of the
children’s fluoride ingestion (3). The authors also took
into account something that most dental studies ignore: namely,
a possible fluoride-induced delay in tooth eruption (4).
The result?
Whereas in an earlier analysis (5) the authors found a positive
effect of fluoride on primary teeth, in this analysis, the authors
failed to find a significant effect on 3 of the 4 groupings
of permanent teeth which they analyzed. To quote: