HEALTH
EFFECTS: Fluoride & Bone Strength: Pre-Fluorosis
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Key Findings
- Fluoride & Reduced Bone
Strength - A "Pre-Fluorotic" Effect:
1) The majority of animal studies investigating fluoride's impact
on bone strength have found that fluoride
has either no effect, or a detrimental
effect, on bone strength.
2) Several of these animal studies have found that the reductions
in bone strength induced by fluoride occur before
bone changes indicative of skeletal
fluorosis are detectable. A similar finding has also been
reported in human clinical trials.
3) It appears therefore that fluoride can reduce bone strength
before evidence of skeletal
fluorosis is apparent.
Animal
Studies - Fluoride
& Reduced Bone Strength - A "Pre-Fluorotic" Effect
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"The results suggest that genetic factors may contribute
to the variation in bone response to fluoride exposure and
that fluoride might affect bone properties without altering BMD."
SOURCE: Mousny M, et al. (2006). The genetic influence on bone
susceptibility to fluoride. Bone
Aug 18; [Epub ahead of print]
"Mineralization defects were not observed
in microradiographs of femora and vertebrae from the current study,
so it is unclear by what mechanism fluoride impaired bone strength."
SOURCE: Turner CH, et al. (1997). Fluoride treatment increased
serum IGF-1, bone turnover, and bone mass, but not bone strength,
in rabbts. Calcified Tissue International 61: 77-83.
“The mineral distribution in the vertebrae
of minipigs treated with NaF did not show any mineralization defects
at the micrometer level. However, an investigation of the
bone mineral at the nanometer level using SAXS showed small but
significant differences between the NaF and the two other groups...
It is, therefore, very likely that part of the
reduction of bone strength following NaF treatment was due to
a change in the material structure of bone at the nanometer level."
SOURCE: Fratzl P, et al. (1996). Effects of sodium fluoride and
alendronate on the bone mineral in minipigs: a small-angle x-ray
scattering and backscattered electron imaging study. Journal
of Bone and Mineral Research 11: 248-253.
"The reason for the fluoride-induced changes
are not known. No osteomalacia or other histological changes,
including focal osteomalacia or mottled periosteocytic lacunae,
were seen on thorough histological examination. No woven bone
was seen or changes in the lamellar structure. Fluoride
content could decrease the mechanical properties of bone as a
result of its effects on crystal structure or matrix properties
or defects that we failed to detect."
SOURCE: Lafage MH, et al. (1995). Comparison of alendronate and
sodium fluoride effects on cancellous and cortical bone in minipigs:
a one year study. Journal of Clinical Investigations 95:
2127-2133.
"[T]here were no signs of bone pathology,
even though bone strength was reduced."
SOURCE: Turner CH, et al. (1995). Fluoride reduces bone strength
in older rats. Journal of Dental Research 74: 1475-1481.
"We have shown unequivocal reductions
in bone strength in rats that were not associated with osteomalacia."
SOURCE: Turner CH, Dunipace AJ. (1995). On fluoride and bone strength.
Calcified Tissue International 56: 415-418.
"The bone strength deficit caused by fluoride
accumulation in bone is not always associated with gross bone
pathology (i.e. woven bone formation),
but may be caused by decreased bone lipid content and calcification
defects induced by decreased bonding strength at the crystal-matrix
interface."
SOURCE: Turner CH, et al. (1993). A mathematical model for fluoride
uptake by the skeleton. Calcified Tissue International
52: 130-138.
"the conclusion by Einhorn et al that
fluoride's effects on bone are due to pathological bone remodeling
are in conflict with findings showing a bone strength deficit
caused by fluoride accumulation in the absence of gross pathology
(i.e. woven bone formation)."
SOURCE: Turner CH, Dunipace AJ. (1993). On fluoride
and bone strength. Calcified Tissue International 53: 289-290.
Human
Clinical Trials - Fluoride
& Reduced Bone Strength - A "Pre-Fluorotic" Effect
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"In the seven patients with early (<1.1 year) spontaneous
hip fractures, none had fluorosis at the time
of their first fracture."
SOURCE: Gutteridge DH, et al. (1990). Spontaneous hip fractures
in fluoride-treated patients: potential causative factors. Journal
of Bone and Mineral Research 5(Suppl 1):S205-15.
"there was no obvious difference in the
histological appearance of bone of those who developed fractures
compared with those who did not."
SOURCE: Hedlund LR, Gallagher JC. (1989). Increased incidence
of hip fracture in osteoporotic women treated with sodium fluoride.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research 4:223-5.
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