HEALTH EFFECTS: Fluoride & Bone Disease

DIRECTORY: FAN > Health > Bone Disease

Fluoride & Bone - Skeletal Fluorosis: (Click for more detail)

Excessive exposure to fluoride causes an arthrtiic bone disease called skeletal fluorosis.

Skeletal fluorosis, especially in its early stages, is a difficult disease to diagnose, and can be readily confused with various forms of arthritis including osteoarthritis, and rheumatoid arthritis.

In the advanced stages, fluorosis can resemble a multitude of bone/joint diseases, including: osteosclerosis, renal osteodystrophy, DISH, spondylosis, osteomalacia, osteoporosis, and secondary hyperparathyroidism.

The risk of developing fluorosis, and the course the disease will take, is influenced by the presence of certain predisposing factors, including impaired kidney function; dietary deficiencies; gastric acidity; and repetitive stress.

While only a limited number of studies have documented the disease in the U.S., it is almost certain that other cases of the disease have occurred but escaped detection.

Fluoride & Bone - Bone Fracture: (Click for more detail)

1) The vast majority of animal studies investigating fluoride's effect on bone strength, have found fluoride to have either no effect or a negative effect on strength. Very few animal studies have found a beneficial effect.

2) Studies on human populations consuming fluoride in drinking water, have found an association between dental fluorosis and increased bone fracture in children; and between long-term consumption of fluoridated water and increased hip fracture in the elderly.

3) Carefully conducted human clinical trials - including two "double-blind trials" - have found that fluoride (at doses of 18-34 mg/day for just 1-4 years) increases the rate of bone fracture, particularly hip fracture, among osteoporosis patients.

4) Animal studies and human clinical trials indicate that fluoride can reduce bone strength before skeletal fluorosis is present.

Fluoride & Bone - Research Gaps:

1) No systematic research exploring the incidence of skeletal fluorosis among susceptible subsets of the population including heavy tea-drinkers and people with kidney disease.

2) Other than 3 small, limited studies from the 1950s-1960s (Steinberg 1955, 1958; Ansell 1965), no research exploring the relationship between fluoride exposure and arthritis in the general population.

3) No comprehensive research exploring the doses of fluoride capable of producing the early stages of skeletal fluorosis, and how such doses vary based on the presence or absence of predisposing factors.

4) No research exploring how genetics may influence the risk and nature of fluoride-induced bone effects in the general population.

5) No comprehensive data in the US on the levels of fluoride in the bone and blood of individuals in fluoridated communities and the relationship of these levels to bone changes.


Fluoride & Bone - CONTENTS of DATABASE:

A) Fluoride & Bone Fracture:

Data Compilation:

B) Skeletal Fluorosis:

Data Compilation:

Excerpted Papers:

C) Fluoride & Bone Density:

Data Compilation:

D) Fluoride & Bone Cells:

Data Compilation:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 
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