Occupational fluoride exposure.
January 1977
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Journal of Occupational Medicine
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Hodge HC, Smith FA.
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19(1):12-39.
Understandably, it is not uncommon to find reference to arthritic changes, if for no other reason than the difficulty of distinguishing them from certain fluoride effects on bone.
... Data are available from a single epidemiological study of gynecologic problems in female workers in a superphosphate manufacturing plant (Kuznetsova, 1969)[ref.99]. The exposed group comprised 302 women mostly 20-40 years old and the control group 309 office employees and housewives not exposed to F. Dust concen