Title: Fluoride
1Fluoride
2Fluoride Human Health and Caries Prevention
- Fluoride ranks as a primary influence in better
oral health because it demonstrated that caries
and subsequent tooth loss were not inevitable. -
- Just as important, it helped dentists to reshape
their attitudes toward tooth conservation and
retention.
3ENVIRONMENTAL FLUORIDE
- Fluorine is one of the most reactive elements and
therefore is never found naturally in its
elemental form. - The F ion, however, is abundant in nature and
occurs almost universally in soils and waters in
varying, but generally low, concentrations. - Seawater contains 1.2 to 1.4 ppm F.
- Fresh surface waters, 0.2 ppm F or less,
- Deep well waters, 29.5 ppm F have been recorded
4ENVIRONMENTAL FLUORIDE
- F's ubiquity in soil and water means that all
plants and animals contain F to some extent. - Given this environmental ubiquity, it seems
likely that all forms of life must have evolved
to thrive with continuous exposure to small
amounts of F.
5SOURCES AND AMOUNTS OF FLUORIDE INTAKE
- Humans absorb F from air, food, and water.
- Air intake is usually negligible, around 0.04 mg
F/day. Exceptions can occur around some
industrial plants that work with F-rich material,
an issue that has nothing to do with the use of F
to control caries.
6SOURCES AND AMOUNTS OF FLUORIDE INTAKE
- F's abundance in soils and plants means that
everyone consumes some F. - Estimates for an adult North American male in a
fluoridated area fall within the range of 1 to 3
mg F per day from food and beverages, decreasing
to 1.0 mg F per day or less in a nonfluoridated
area - Estimates from "market basket" analyses are that
6-month-old infants ingest 0.21 to 0.54 mg F/day
in 4 American cities with different F
concentrations in the drinking water. - For 2-year-olds in the same cities, the range was
0.41 to 0.61 mg F/day
7SOURCES AND AMOUNTS OF FLUORIDE INTAKE
- For infants, The Iowa studies documented the F
exposures of newborn infants at periodic
intervals through extensive interviews about all
likely sources of F exposure. - Total F intakes from drinking water alone during
the first 9 months of life, either consumed
directly or when added to formula and juice,
averaged 0.29 to 0.38 mg F/day.
8SOURCES AND AMOUNTS OF FLUORIDE INTAKE
- Although similar to earlier market basket
surveys, there was considerable range of intake
with 25 of 9-month old children ingesting 0.49
F/day. - Even without swallowing F toothpaste or taking F
supplements, the risk of dental fluorosis is
likely to be increased in these children because
the upper limit of intake for 12-month-old
children, beyond which the risk of detectable
fluorosis is increased, has been estimated at
0.43 mg F/day.
9SOURCES AND AMOUNTS OF FLUORIDE INTAKE
- For most people, water and other beverages
provide 75 of F intake, whether or not the
drinking water is fluoridated. - This can occur because many soft drinks and fruit
juices are processed in fluoridated cities.
10FLUORIDE PHYSIOLOGY
- Although the use of F is a contribution to the
public's health of which dentistry can be proud,
F compounds must be handled responsibly and with
respect. - Everyone in dentistry should understand how the
human body handles ingested F so that the
material can be used safely and efficiently.
11Absorption, Retention, and Excretion
- Ingested F is absorbed mainly from the upper
gastrointestinal tract. - About 80 of F in food is absorbed, as is 85 to
97 of F in water. - Absorbed F is transported in the plasma, and is
either excreted or deposited in the calcified
tissues. - Most absorbed F is excreted in the urine
- F ingested on an empty stomach produces a peak
plasma level within 30 minutes. - The time of the plasma peak is extended and the
level of the peak reduced, if F is taken with
food. This is probably because of the binding of
some F with calcium and other cations. - When F absorption is inhibited this way, fecal
excretion of F increases.
12The Body Burden of F
- Studies on what is called the body burden of F,
meaning how much can be safely absorbed and at
what point F absorption becomes a health concern,
have mostly relied on urinary volumes and plasma
concentrations as the primary measures. - Samples of both are relatively simple to obtain,
although both measures record only recent F
intake (i.e., the previous 3 to 4 weeks) rather
than lifetime intakes.
13The Body Burden of F
- Urinary concentrations can vary considerably with
fluid intake during the period of F exposure and
require a 24 hour sample to be accurate. - Accurate monitoring of plasma levels in
individuals also requires frequent measures
because of normal hour-to-hour fluctuations. - Plasma F concentrations are more closely
correlated with urinary flow rates than with
urinary F concentrations.
14The Body Burden of F
- Although there is no absolute measure of lifetime
F intake, even theoretically, the nearest measure
of long-term F intake would come from bone F
content. - For research purposes, however, this is a
theoretical concept only people don't volunteer
to give a bone sample!
15Fluoride Balance
- Fluoride balance is the net result from the
accumulated effects of F ingestion, degree of F
deposition in bones and teeth, mobilization rate
of F from bone, and the efficiency of the kidneys
in clearing absorbed F.
16Fluoride Physiology
- F has an affinity for calcified tissues (i.e.,
bone and developing teeth). - F that is not excreted is deposited in these hard
tissues, although storage is dynamic rather than
inert. - Bone F levels (from postmortem assays) range from
800 to 10,000 ppm, depending on many factors,
including age and F intake. - F levels in the outer few microns of dental
enamel range from 400 to 3000 ppm and decrease
rapidly with greater enamel depth.
17Fluoride Physiology
- F concentrations in soft tissue rise or fall
parallel to plasma F levels, but because healthy
excretion and deposition mechanisms operate so
rapidly there are negligible concentrations of F
in the fluids of soft tissues other than the
kidney. - A greater proportion of ingested F is excreted
in older persons than in the young. It had been
suggested that this was because children had
lower renal clearance rates than adults, but is
now attributed to greater adsorption of F by the
young skeleton.
18"Optimum Fluoride Intake"
- Frank McClure, estimated in 1943 that the
"average daily diet" contained 1.0 to 1.5 mg F,
or about 0.05 mg F/kg body weight/ day in
children up to 12 years of age. -
- McClure's estimate somehow came to be
interpreted as the lower limit of the range of
"optimum" F intake. - A widely quoted 1974 reports suggested 0.06 mg
F/kg body weight/day as "optimum,"
19"Optimum Fluoride Intake"
- The range of 0.05 to 0.07 mg F/kg body weight/day
was suggested as "optimum" in 1980, and has even
been accepted by opponents of water fluoridation. - The estimate of 0.05 to 0.07 mg F/kg/day
converts to 3.5 to 4.9 mg F per day for a man
weighing 70 kg - For a 10-kg infant , that is a 12- to
18-month-old child, this "optimum" intake
converts to 0.45 to 0.64 mg F/day.
20"Optimum Fluoride Intake??
- Fluoride was classified as beneficial and not
essential nutrient - The discussions vague about what this intake is
"optimum" for. "optimum" for caries resistance,
but little of F's action in caries control can be
attributed to ingested F. - There is no evidence to link this range of F
ingestion with caries inhibition, so we suggest
that the term "optimum intake" be dropped from
common usage.
21FLUORIDE and HUMAN HEALTH Early Studies
- The first study relating bone fracture experience
to the F concentration in home water supplies, a
subject revisited in the 1990s, concluded that
there was no relationship. - McClure then demonstrated the close relationship
between urinary F and the F levels of domestic
water. His balance studies during World War II,
led to the conclusion that the elimination of
absorbed F via urine and perspiration is almost
complete when the quantity absorbed does not
exceed 4 to 5 mg daily. McClure suggested that
this may be the F limit that could be ingested
without "appreciable hazard" of excessive F
storage in the body.
22FLUORIDE and HUMAN HEALTH
- There was sufficient research evidence to provide
reasonable assurance that controlled
fluoridation, with up to 1.2 ppm F in the
drinking water, could be-instituted in North
America without any public health hazard.
23Mortality
- For the United States as a whole, no differences
could be found in 1949-1950 death rates between
32 cities with 0.7 ppm F or more and 32 randomly
selected nearby cities with 0.25 ppm F or less in
the drinking water. - Mortality rates were similar for cancer, heart
disease, intracranial lesions, nephritis, and
cirrhosis of the liver. - Similar findings were reported later in 1979.
24Cancer
- A number of independent analyses of the same
data, in both Britain and the United States,
however, used more detailed age-sex-race
adjustments none could find a link between
cancer incidence and consumption of fluoridated
water. - A special committee appointed by the US Public
Health Service, reached the following conclusion
on cancer risk
25Cancer
- Optimal fluoridation of drinking water does not
pose a detectable cancer risk to humans as
evidenced by extensive human epidemiological data
available to date. - No trends in cancer risk, including the risk of
osteosarcoma, were attributed to the introduction
of fluoride into drinking water in these new
studies.
26Down Syndrome
- A claim that water fluoridation caused an
increase in Down syndrome came mid-1950s. - The studies had errors in the research design.
The most serious error was to assume that the
city of birth was the place of residence of the
mother, which is clearly not the case for
hospitals serving a large rural population. -
- More rigorous independent studies failed to show
any correlation between fluoridation and Down
syndrome.
27Bone Density, Fracture Experience, and
Osteoporosis
- Bone fragility conditions (e.g., spontaneous
vertebral fracture in the elderly as a result of
osteoporosis) have been treated for years with
high does of F combined with calcium, estrogen,
and vitamin D. - Controlled clinical trials have shown that high
doses of- F (30 to 60 mg/day), administered under
medical supervision, can increase vertebral bone
mass and reduce the vertebral fracture rate. - These favorable changes do not come without
problems, however, for the new bone can be
imperfectly mineralized and a good proportion of
patients do not respond to treatment.
28Bone Density, Fracture Experience, and
Osteoporosis
- Recently, ecologic studies to assess the risk of
bone fracture relative to fluoridated water have
produced mixed results - decreased risk no association, and
- increased risk, with relative risks in the range
of 1.08 to 1.41. - Extensive reviews of literature have also reached
the conclusion that no relationship can be
discerned between bone fracture experience and
water with 1.0 ppm F.
29Bone Density, Fracture Experience, and
Osteoporosis
- In summary, although there does not appear to be
any protective effect from fluoridated water,
neither is there evidence that bone fracture
experience is associated with drinking water
containing 1.0 ppm F.
30Child Development
- Newburgh-Kingston fluoridation project,
- No significant differences in general health or
body processes between children in the two cities
were seen, - No radiographic differences in bone density could
be demonstrated. - Essential similarity in vision and hearing tests
and in findings for skeletal maturation,
hemoglobin level, erythrocyte and leukocyte
counts, and quantity of sugar, albumin, red blood
cells, and casts in urine. - At the final examination, 19 of 476 children in
Newburgh (4.0) and 20 of 405 children in
Kingston (4.9) were referred to the family
physician for conditions including such minor
ailments as a plantar wart or ringworm. - Long-term downward trends in stillbirth and
maternal and infant mortality rates continued in
each of the cities. The overall conclusion was
that no differences of medical significance
could be found between the two groups of children.
31FLUORIDE TOXICITY
- There is difference between a single intake of
5.0 g F and constant intake of 1 to 3 mg F daily. - F is like many other nutrients beneficial in
small amounts, toxic in high amounts. This
gradation in response with variations in dose is
a common pharmaceutical phenomenon and is known
as a doseresponse relationship.
32FLUORIDE TOXICITY
- Ingestion of a single dose of 5 to 10 g of sodium
fluoride by an adult male (32 to 64 mg F/kg body
weight) results in a rather unpleasant death in 2
to 4 hours if first aid is not applied
immediately. - From that lower limit of 32 mg F/kg body weight,
the estimated equivalent dose for a 10-kg child
(12 to 18 months old) is 320 mg F.
33FLUORIDE TOXICITY
- If an individual is known or suspected to have
taken a potentially toxic amount of F, first aid
is to - induce vomiting or
- ingest a material to bind F. Milk is usually the
most readily available. - The ADA recommends, as a safety precaution, that
F materials for home use contain no more than 264
mg F if packaged in a bulk container (tablets,
mouthwash) or up to 300 mg F if the F material is
individually packaged.
34Dental Fluorosis
- Dental fluorosis is a permanent
hypomineralization of enamel, characterized by
greater surface and subsurface porosity than in
normal enamel. It results from excess F reaching
the developing tooth during developmental stages.
35FLUORIDE AND CARIES CONTROL MECHANISMS OF ACTION
- F works best to prevent caries when a constant,
low ambient level of F is maintained in the oral
cavity. Its most important caries-inhibitory
action is posteruptive, though a pre-eruptive
role continues to be suggested. Fs action in
preventing caries is multifactorial its effect
comes from a combination of several mechanisms.
Three major mechanisms of action have been
identified, although some possible additional
mechanisms have been hypothesized.
36FLUORIDE AND CARIES CONTROL MECHANISMS OF ACTION
- Earlier assumptions Pre-eruptive F is thought to
act by being incorporated into the developing
enamel hydroxyapatite crystal and thus reducing
enamel solubility. - It has been argued that pre-eruptive benefits are
especially important for reducing pit-and-fissure
lesions. - This is the "pre-eruptive" model for which the
actual supportive evidence is thin. The evidence
for posteruptive F action is much stronger.
37Fluoride and Plaque
- F introduced into the mouth is partly taken up by
dental plaque, where 95 of it is held in bound
form rather than as ionic F. - Plaque contains 5 to 10 mg F/kg wet weight in
low F areas and 10 to 20 mg F/kg wet weight in
fluoridated areas. - The bound F can be released in response to
lowered pH, and F is taken up more readily by
demineralized enamel than by sound enamel. The
availability of plaque F to respond to the acid
challenge leads to the gradual establishment of a
well-crystallized and more acid-resistant apatite
in the enamel surface during demin-remin.
38Fluoride and Plaque
- F in plaque also inhibits glycolysis, the process
by which fermentable carbohydrate is metabolized
by cariogenic bacteria to produce acid. F from
drinking water and toothpaste concentrates in
plaque, which contains higher levels of F than
does saliva. - There is also some evidence that plaque F can
inhibit the production of extracellular
polysaccharide by cariogenic bacteria, a
necessary process for plaque adherence to smooth
enamel surfaces.
39Fluoride and Plaque
- High concentration F gels may have a specific
bactericidal action on cariogenic bacteria in
plaque. - These gels also leave a temporary layer of CaF2
on the enamel surface, which is available for
release when the pH drops at the enamel surface. - At lower concentrations, Streptococcus mutans has
been shown, to become less acidogenic through
adaptation to an environment where F is
constantly present. It is not yet known whether
this ecologic adaptation reduces the
cariogenicity of acidogenic bacteria in humans.
40Fluoride and Enamel
- It became evident to researchers as early as the
mid-1970s that a higher concentration of enamel F
could not by itself explain the extensive
reductions in caries that F produced. - The theoretical concentration of F in pure
fluorapatite that would reduce its acid
solubility is 38,000 ppm, a concentration not
even approached in human dental enamel.
41Fluoride and Plaque
- Perhaps the most revealing study on the action of
F in inhibiting dental caries came from the
Tiel-Culemborg fluoridation study in the
Netherlands. - Although there were considerably fewer dentinal
lesions in fluoridated Tiel than in
nonfluoridated Culemborg after 15 years of
fluoridation. - There was no difference between the two
communities in initial enamel lesions. - This finding means that fewer enamel lesions
progress to dentinal caries in a fluoridated area
than in a nonfluoridated area. - F, therefore, does not prevent the initial
carious attack, which would be expected if its
presence in the enamel crystal increased enamel
resistance to acid dissolution. - The Tiel-Culemborg findings mean than F in the
oral cavity inhibits further demineralization of
the lesion and promotes its remineralization.
42Fluoride and Saliva
- Salivary F concentrations are low, although they
are 3 times higher in fluoridated than in
nonfluoridated areas. - In a fluoridated area, salivary F levels have
averaged 0.016 ppm in a nonfluoridated area,
they were 0.006 ppm. - After toothbrushing with an F toothpaste or
mouthrinsing with an F solution, salivary F
levels can rise 100- to 1000-fold.
43Effects on Different Tooth Surfaces
- Although F reduces caries on both types of
surface, the greatest relative effect is on
smooth and proximal surfaces.
44EFFECTIVE USE OF FLUORIDE
- Categorizing F compounds into systemic fluorides
and topical fluorides is not easy . - The most cost-effective way of reaching an entire
community with regular, low-concentration F is
through water fluoridation.