Oasis Discussions

Are there long-term effects of water fluoridation on the human skeleton?

This summary is based on the article published in the Journal of Dental Research: The Long-term Effects of  Water Fluoridation on the Human Skeleton (November 2010)

Context

Municipal water fluoridation has notably reduced the incidence of dental caries and is widely considered a public health success. However, ingested fluoride is sequestered into bone, as well as teeth, and data on the long-term effect of exposure to these very low doses of fluoride remain inconclusive. Epidemiological studies suggest that effects of fluoride on bone are minimal.

Purpose of the Study

The authors hypothesized that the direct measurement of bone tissue from individuals residing in municipalities with and without fluoridated water would reveal a relationship between fluoride content and structural or mechanical properties of bone.

Conclusion

Further Findings

References

  1. McDonagh MS, Whiting PF, Wilson PM, Sutton AJ, Chestnutt I, Cooper J, et al. (2000). Systematic review of water fluoridation. BMJ 321:855-859.
  2. Choubisa SL (2001). Endemic fluorosis in southern Rajasthan, India. Fluoride 34:61-70.
  3. Dequeker J, Declerck K (1993). Fluor in the treatment of osteoporosis. An overview of thirty years clinical research. Schweiz Med Wochenschr 123:2228-2234.

2 Comments

  1. Hardy Limeback May 6, 2014

    Thanks for bringing to our attention this study.
    I’m pretty sure you are referring to this one.
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20858781

    I was one of the principle Investigators on that study and co-author of the paper.

    This area of study is quite complex and I have tried to explain why I feel we cannot continue fluoridation unless real proof of safety and evidence of significant benefit can be obtained.

    See

    http://cof-cof.ca/2012/08/dr-hardy-limeback-bsc-phd-biochemistry-dds-concerned-that-fluoridation-can-harm-human-bone/

    The benefit of maybe saving one tooth from decay over a lifetime of fluoridation is not worth the risk of damage to our bone.

    Reply
    1. Kelly Wright May 9, 2014

      Dr. Limeback, can you provide a reference for your assertion that fluoridation is “maybe saving one tooth from decay over a lifetime”. Your comment seems to contradict the first line in the abstract of the paper you co-authored and have cited which states: “Municipal water fluoridation has notably reduced the incidence of dental caries and is widely considered a public health success”.

      Reply

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