FLUORIDE ACTION NETWORK
September 21, 2003
Health Warning: The Thyroid and fluoride
by Paul Connett, PhD
The literature dealing with the interaction between fluoride
and the thyroid gland has a very long history, stretching
back to a paper written in 1854 by Maumene who linked goiter in
dogs with exposure to fluoride. The following URL links to a summary
of that history http://www.bruha.com/pfpc/html/thyroid_history.html
I do not pretend to know enough about either this history or
the detailed functioning of the thyroid gland to offer much insight
into this issue. However, it is an extremely important area and
it warrants far more attention from governments promoting fluoridation
than it currently receives, which is practically zero! Millions
of Americans are impacted by thyroid dysfunction, and if only
a small fraction of these have their condition caused by, or worsened
by, fluoride it is a very serious matter indeed.
There are four important lines of evidence that fluoride interferes
with the thyroid gland.
1) The condition known as "goiter"
which involves a gross swelling of the thyroid gland, which in
turn produces very marked swellings in the neck, is known to be
caused by iodine deficiency. However, it has also been found to
occur in areas where there are adequate supplies of iodine, but
where there's an excess fluoride
in the water.
2) Starting in the 1930s and continuing through to the 1970s
sodium fluoride was used to lower the activity
of the thyroid gland for those suffering from hyperthyroidism
(i.e. over active thyroid gland). The obvious question then becomes,
if fluoride lowers the activity of an overactive thyroid gland
what does it do to a normal or underactive thyroid gland?
3) It has been known for a long time that one of the consequences
of iodine deficiency in mothers is an increased risk of mental
retardation in their children. With the advent of iodized salt,
this is a less frequent occurrence in industrialized countries.
However, studies from China indicate that even a moderate amount
of fluoride exposure can exacerbate
the effects of low iodide's impacts on the developing brain.
4) It has been known for a long time that fluoride mimics the
action of the thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH). Because TSH sends
its message across the cell membrane of the thyroid gland via
G-proteins, a candidate mechanism for fluoride's action would
be fluoride's well established ability (See reviews by Strunecka
& Patocka, 1999; and Li, 2003), in the presence of a trace
amount of aluminum, to switch on G-proteins.
Taking these lines of evidence one at a time:
1) Endemic Goiter (also spelled goitre) and fluoride.
In a 90 page report entitled "Endemic
Goitre in the Union of South Africa and some Neighbouring Territories",
prepared for the Department of Nutrition for the South African
government, Dr. Douw Steyn and colleagues concluded that there
were two separate causes for endemic goiter. In their summary,
they state:
"In the Union of South Africa endemic goitre is caused
by: (1) a primary iodine deficiency in the drinking water and
soil, and most probably in the food; and (2) excessive quantities
of fluorine in subterranean drinking-water in spite of super
sufficiency of iodine in the waters."
The areas with endemic goiter caused by excess fluoride were
located in the Northwest part of South Africa. In 1999, Jooste
et al repeated Steyn's findings when they reported endemic goiter
in the absence of iodine deficiency in schoolchildren of the Northern
Cape Province. A similar relationship between excess fluoride
exposure and goiter has been reported in England
(Wilson 1941), in the Punjab region of India (Wilson 1941), in
Nepal (Day and Powell-Jackson,
1972), in Kenja (Obel 1982), and in
Gujarat, India (Desai 1993). Other studies, however, have failed
to find this relationship (see Burgi 1984).
2) Treating hyperthyroidism with sodium fluoride tablets.
What is striking about the doses of fluoride used to treat hyperthyroidism
is how small they were. Galletti and
Joyet (1958) found that a daily dose of just 2 to 10 mg of
fluoride per day was enough to reduce the basal metabolism rate
(BMR) of hyperthyroid patients and alleviate their condition.
This is within the range of doses that many people living in fluoridated
areas will ingest. The US Department of Health and Human Services
(DHHS,1991) estimates that an adult in a fluoridated community
receives between 1.6 and 6.6 mg of fluoride per day from all
sources combined.
In a World Health Organization review (Fluoride and Health, WHO,
1970), Semole cites evidence from Korrodi et al (1956) that, in
normal human subjects, fluorides have no effect on the thyroid.
He then asks:
"Why does sodium fluoride exert a mild antithyroidal effect
in hyperthyroidic patients if it is inactive in normal persons?
Nobody knows."
However, the claim that fluoride has no effect on normal thyroid
function may have been premature. According to a study conducted
by Bachinskii (1985), prolonged
consumption of water with 2.3 ppm fluoride produced changes in
thyroid function, not only in people with hyperthyroidism but
in people with normal thyroid function as well. Bachinskii writes
in the abstract
of his paper:
"Altogether 123 persons were examined: 47 healthy persons,
43 patients with thyroid hyperfunction and 33 with thyroid hypofunction.
It was established that prolonged consumption of drinking water
with a raised fluorine content (122 +/- 5 mumol/l with the normal
value of 52 +/- 5 mumol/l) by healthy persons caused tension
of function of the pituitary-thyroid system that was expressed
in TSH elevated production, a decrease in the T3 concentration
and more intense absorption of radioactive iodine by the thyroid
as compared to healthy persons who consumed drinking water with
the normal fluorine concentration. The results led to
a conclusion that excess of fluorine in drinking water was a
risk factor of more rapid development of thyroid pathology."
3. Lowering of IQ in China.
It is well established that the pituitary/thyroid system is important
in the early
mental development of children thus if fluoride interfered
with the thyroid it could, among other things, result in lowered
IQ in children. In this respect, the results of a
UNICEF sponsored study of mental retardation, IQ and thyroid
hormone status in children in areas endemically low in iodide
are particularly revealing. Lin Fa-Fu et al. (1991) found in one
region of China that even a modest amount of fluoride in the water
(i.e. 0.91 ppm versus 0.34 ppm) led to an even greater reduction
in IQ and the frequency of mental retardation, than simply low
iodide by itself.
2) Yang
et al (1994) further investigated the effect of iodide and
fluoride on IQ and hormonal status in areas of high iodide and
high fluoride. From their study the authors concluded that their
results "indicate that high iodine and high fluorine exert
severe damage to human body." Compared to controls, children
had higher dental fluorosis rates; markedly lower iodine-131 uptake;
higher serum TSH levels, and slightly lower average IQ, with 16.7%
placed in a category labeled "low intelligent." We only
have the abstract in English, the rest of the paper is in Chinese.
4. TSH, fluoride and G-proteins.
Just how fluoride impacts the thyroid gland is not clear. We
know that, in the presence of a trace amount of aluminum, fluoride
switches on G-proteins, thus sending messages normally delivered
by water soluble hormones. TSH is one of the water soluble hormones
which is mimicked by aluminum fluoride. But the puzzling thing
about this is that one would expect that this would lead to an
activation of the thyroid gland not deactivation (as in the case
of someone with hypothyroidism).
A clue to this puzzle may have come in 1994 in a paper by Tezelman
et al. These researchers using Chinese hamster ovary cells, report
that fluoride increases intracellular cAMP concentration (the
secondary messenger produced as a result of switching on G-proteins),
but the end result was desensitization of the receptor for the
thyroid stimulating hormone (TSHr). In other words, the fluoride
begins by stimulating the cell but the end result was that it
led the cell to become less responsive to the normal stimulation
by TSH. The authors state that, "Desensitization or decreased
response to the same (homologous) or other stimuli (heterologous)
is a well known process. Homologous desensitization to TSH has
been demonstrated in normal thyroid tissue."
I will be returning to the activation of G-proteins in a later
health warning as well as its ability
to lower IQ in another.
Meanwhile, various recent government sponsored reviews have given
this topic very short shrift. The York Review (McDonagh et al.,
2000) looked at only two of the goiter studies (Jooste, 1999 and
Gedalia, 1963). They didn't use a weight of evidence approach,
bringing in the clinical and biochemical studies above. The Irish
Fluoridation Forum (2002) didn't do any review of primary studies
on health except dental fluorosis and four bone fracture studies.
The CDC (1999) reviewed no health studies beyond citing the NRC
(1993) review and the NRC(1993) review didn't consider impacts
on the thyroid system, nor did the First draft of the WHO review
(Environmental Health Criteria 227: Fluorides, 2002).
I welcome any corrections or comments, especially if readers
know of any government review since WH0 (1970) that has discussed
fluoride's impact on the thyroid gland.
References:
Bachinskii PP, et al. (1985) Action of the body fluorine of
healthy persons and thyroidopathy patients on the function of
hypophyseal-thyroid the system. Probl Endokrinol (Mosk)
31(6):25-9.
Burgi H, et al. (1984). Fluorine and thyroid gland function:
a review of the literature. Klin Wochenschr 15;62(12):564-9.
CDC (1999). Achievements in Public Health, 1900-1999: Fluoridation
of Drinking Water to Prevent Dental Caries. Mortality and
Morbidity Weekly Review 48(41): 933-940.
Day TK, Powell-Jackson PR. (1972). Fluoride, Water Hardness,
and Endemic Goitre. Lancet 1:1135-1138.
Demole V. (1970) Toxic effects on the thyroid. In: WHO. (1970).
Fluorides and Human Health. World Health Organization, Geneva,
Switzerland. pp. 255-271.
Desai VK, et al. (1993). Epidemiological study of goitre in
endemic fluorosis district of Gujarat. Fluoride 26:187-90.
Galletti P, Joyet G. (1958). Effect of Fluorine on Thyroidal
Iodine Metabolism in Hyperthyroidism. Journal of Clinical
Endocrinology 18:1102-1110.
Gedalia I, Brand N. (1963). The relationship of fluoride and
iodine in drinking water in the occurrence of goiter Arch
Int Pharmacodyn 142:312-5.
Jooste PL. (1999). Endemic goitre in the absence of iodine
deficiency in schoolchildren of the Northern Cape Province of
South Africa. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 53(1):8-12.
Korrodi H, et al. (1956). Helv. med. Acta, 23. 601.
(cited by Demole 1970).
Li L. (2003). The biochemistry and physiology of metallic fluoride:
action, mechanism, and implications. Critical Reviews of
Oral Biology and Medicine 14(2):100-14.
Lin Fa-Fu; et al (1991). The relationship of a low-iodine and
high-fluoride environment to subclinical cretinism in Xinjiang.
Iodine Deficiency Disorder Newsletter Vol. 7. No. 3.
(August).
Maumene E. (1854). Exprience pour dterminer l'action des florures
sur l'conomie animale. Compt Rend Akad Sci Paris 39:538.
McDonagh M, et al. (2000). A Systematic Review of Public Water
Fluoridation. ("The York Review.") NHS Center for
Reviews and Dissemination. University of York. September 2000.
National Research Council. (1993). Health effects of ingested
fluoride. Report of the Subcommittee on Health Effects
of Ingested Fluoride. National Academy Press, Washington, DC.
Obel AO. (1982). Goitre and fluorosis in Kenya. East African
Medical Journal 59:363-365.
Tezelman S, et al. (1994). Desensitization of adenylate cyclase
in Chinese hamster ovary cells transfected with human thyroid-stimulating
hormone receptor. Endocrinology 134(3):1561-9.
Steyn DG, et al. (1955). Endemic Goitre in the Union of
South Africa and Some Neighbouring Territories. Union of
South Africa. Department of Nutrition.
Strunecka A, Patocka J. (1999). Pharmacological and toxicological
effects of aluminofluoride complexes. Fluoride 32:
230-242.
Wilson D. (1941). Fluorine in the aetiology of endemic goitre.
Lancet Feb 15: 212-213.
World Health Organization. (2002). Environmental Health Criteria
227: FLUORIDES. World Health Organization, Geneva.
.Yang Y, et al. (1994). [Effects of high iodine and high fluorine
on children's intelligence and the metabolism of iodine and
fluorine]. Zhonghua Liu Xing Bing Xue Za Zhi.15(5):296-8.
Zhao W, et al. (1998). Long-term effects of various iodine
and fluorine doses on the thyroid and fluorosis in mice. Endocrine
Regulations 32(2):63-70.