F.A.N. Newsletter
Three significant
studies—two of which were U.S. government funded (NIH)--have been published
today linking fluoride exposure to ADHD, thyroid problems, and showing that
pregnant women in “optimally” fluoridated Canada have significantly higher
levels of fluoride in their urine than women in non-fluoridated
communities.
This third study
also showed that pregnant Canadians had fluoride urinary levels similar to those
that reduced IQ in offspring from last year’s Bashash et al,
2017 NIH-funded study. These findings suggest that the Bashash results
from Mexico City may be applied to Canada, and probably the United States,
namely that pre-natal exposure to fluoride has the potential to lower IQ in
children. In other words, the claim by the ADA that the 2017 Bashash study was
not relevant to the U.S. is more about propaganda than serious scientific
analysis.
Here are the three new studies:
Here are the three new studies:
--Fluoride exposure and thyroid function among adults
living in Canada: Effect modification by iodine status.
--Community
Water Fluoridation and Urinary Fluoride Concentrations in a National Sample of
Pregnant Women in Canada.
Below is an article
that appeared this morning in Environmental Health News that we urge you to read and share.
Please also like, comment, and share our FAN Facebook and Twitter posts on the article.
STAY TUNED! We will be providing full coverage and analysis of these three studies over the coming days into next week.
Stuart Cooper
Campaign Director
Fluoride Action Network
STAY TUNED! We will be providing full coverage and analysis of these three studies over the coming days into next week.
Stuart Cooper
Campaign Director
Fluoride Action Network
We add it to drinking water for our teeth, but is
fluoride hurting us?
Three new studies released today link fluoride exposure to ADHD and thyroid problems, and point to drinking water as the major source of exposure.
Three new studies released today link fluoride exposure to ADHD and thyroid problems, and point to drinking water as the major source of exposure.
By: Brian
Bienkowski
Two studies — one
from Canada and one Mexico — released today point to potential health problems
from fluoride, which, in a majority of U.S. communities, is purposefully added
to drinking water to protect people's teeth.
The Canada study
found that adults who are iodine deficient and have higher levels of fluoride in
their system have a greater risk of an underactive thyroid. The Mexico study
found mothers with higher fluoride exposure during pregnancy were more likely to
have children with symptoms of ADHD. Both studies were published in the
journal Environmental International.
A third study,
published in Environmental Health Perspectives, found that among 1,566
pregnant women in Canada, fluoride levels in urine were almost two times higher
for women who lived in regions where the element was added to their drinking
water compared to pregnant women in regions with non-fluoridated
water.
The studies call
into question the practice of purposely adding fluoride to water or salt, which
is done to prevent cavities and, to a lesser extent, osteoporosis. Many cities
in the U.S. and Canada add fluoride to public drinking water and in Mexico it's
added to some salt. Approximately 66 percent of people in the U.S. receive
drinking water with added fluoride, according to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
About 80 percent of
fluoride exposure comes from water and beverages such as tea, which can leach
fluoride from soil. Other sources include grapes and shellfish.
"I have grave
concerns about the health effects of fluoride exposure," Ashley Malin, lead
author of the Canada thyroid study and a researcher at the Department of
Environmental Medicine and Public Health, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount
Sinai, told EHN. "And not just from my study but the other studies that have
come out in recent years."
Fluoride, iodine
and thyroids
Malin and
colleagues had massive amounts of information from the Canadian Health Measure
study. They looked at fluoride levels in the urine of nearly 7 million
Canadians, as well as iodine deficiency and thyroid gland activity.
They found
Canadians who were deficient in iodine—a mineral crucial for proper functioning
of the thyroid — and who had high amounts of fluoride in their urine also had
higher levels of thyroid stimulating hormones. Elevated levels of these hormones
are a marker for a suppressed thyroid gland – commonly referred to as
hypothyroidism, a condition that can cause a host of problems including fatigue,
disrupted heart rates, and altered metabolism.
Small increases in
thyroid stimulating hormones can be problematic, Malin said.
"Someone doesn't
need to have full blown hypothyroidism to have an elevation in [thyroid
stimulating hormones]. Research is showing more and more that subclinical
elevations are associated with bad health effects," Malin said.
Iodine helps flush
fluoride from the body so a deficiency leaves the body with more fluoride, which
has been shown to interfere with certain enzymes important for thyroid function.
This could explain why only iodine deficient Canadians seemed sensitive to
fluoride impacts.
Malin said 18
percent of the nearly 7 million people they studied were iodine deficient.
"We're talking about potentially [more than] a million people at risk of an
underactive thyroid due to fluoride exposure."
But there are major
health benefits of fluoride in water. According to the CDC, drinking fluoridated
water reduces cavities (also called tooth decay) by about 25 percent in children
and adults. The agency named water fluoridation one of its "Ten Great Public
Health Achievements" of the 20th Century.
Dr. Manish Arora, a
dentist and vice chairman of the Department of Environmental Medicine and Public
Health at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, told EHN via email that
it "is important to balance these results with what we know about the benefits
of water fluoridation as well."
"There have been
tremendous gains in children's oral health worldwide over the past decades that,
at least in part, can be attributed to the beneficial effects of fluoride," said
Arora, who was not involved in any of the studies released today but is
collaborating with some of the researchers on other projects.
While the new study
doesn't prove fluoride impacts thyroid function, previous studies have linked
the element to reduction thyroid
hormones, and to elevated thyroid stimulating
hormones and
increased likelihood of
hypothyroidism and diabetes in adults.
Behavior
impacts
In the other study
published today, researchers looked at 213 Mexican mother-children pairs and
examined mothers' urine fluoride levels during pregnancy and assessed children
for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms at ages 6 to 12.
They found mothers with higher levels of fluoride during pregnancy were more
likely to have children with ADHD symptoms, especially inattention.
It's not clear from
this study why fluoride may impact child's behavior, but it could be driving
thyroid hormone insufficiency in pregnant mothers (which can lead to problems in
their unborn), or altering children's levels of dopamine, which moves signals
from nerve cells to the brain and is vital for behavior development.
Christine Till, an
associate professor and researcher at York University, told EHN one of her main
concerns is that pregnant women are susceptible to iodine deficiency, which,
according to the study from Canada, could leave the mothers-to-be with thyroid
problems.
Also, fluoride
easily crosses the placenta from mother to her unborn. The study is not the
first to find a fluoride-behavioral link: A previous study linked the element
to ADHD in U.S.
children.
Dr. Howard Hu,
co-author of the Mexico study and an epidemiological researcher at the
University of Washington, told EHN the research from Canada on fluoride levels
in pregnant women "makes the results of this study from Mexico even more
applicable to what might be going on in North America."
To add or not
to add
The evidence that
fluoride may have negative impacts on health is building, Hu said, adding that
one of the "most awkward features of this debate" is that it pits one branch of
public health vs another.
Arora said "as a
dentist and environmental health scientist, I feel this is an opportune moment
in our professions to have an honest discussion."
"A question that is
becoming increasingly important – is fluoridation of water supplies the best way
to deliver the oral health benefits of fluoride?" Arora said. "For me, there is
no 'one size fits all' answer to this. Socioeconomics, background risk and other
aspects of the community have to be considered, but now is the time to have the
scientific debate."
The American Dental
Association did not respond to comment on the new studies. However, it has stood
by drinking water fluoridation as a vital public health tool in preventing tooth
decay.
Hu echoed Arora and
said the answer in moving forward with fluoride is more nuanced than being pro-
or anti-fluoride.
"Clearly this
warrants additional research and consideration with how policies related to
fluoride may need to be rethought," Hu said. "And not simply 'do we use fluoride
or not,' but can we figure out a way to preserve the benefits while minimizing
the potential adverse effects."
Till said she is
"certain the safety of fluoride ingestion has not been proven."
"The problem is
that it's an uncontrolled dose – everyone is exposed to different levels. It may
be prudent for pregnant women to reduce ingesting fluoride during
pregnancy."
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home