| Literature DB >> 31856837 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: After the discovery of fluoride as a caries-preventing agent in the mid-twentieth century, fluoridation of community water has become a widespread intervention, sometimes hailed as a mainstay of modern public health. However, this practice results in elevated fluoride intake and has become controversial for two reasons. First, topical fluoride application in the oral cavity appears to be a more direct and appropriate means of preventing caries. Second, systemic fluoride uptake is suspected of causing adverse effects, in particular neurotoxicity during early development. The latter is supported by experimental neurotoxicity findings and toxicokinetic evidence of fluoride passing into the brain.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive disorder; Dental caries; Drinking water; Fluoridation; Fluoride poisoning; Intellectual disability; Neurotoxic disorder; Prenatal exposure delayed effects
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31856837 PMCID: PMC6923889 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-019-0551-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Characteristics of 14 cross-sectional studies of fluoride exposure and children’s cognitive and developmental outcomes published after 2012
| Reference | Study location, year | No. in high-exposure group | No. in reference group | Age range (or mean), years | Fluoride exposure | Outcome measure | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assessment | Mean or range (mg/L) | |||||||
| [ | China, 2014 | 123 | 42 | 8–12 | Urine | 3.03 (urine, short-term); 2.33 (urine, long-term); 1.34 (urine, ref) | RSPMa | Fluoride exposure was negatively associated with children’s IQ |
| [ | China, 2015 | 26 (moderate/severe dental fluorosis) | 8 (normal/questionable dental fluorosis) | 6–8 | Drinking water, urine | 2.66 (water, moderate/severe); 1.0 (water, normal/questionable); 2.44 (urine, moderate/severe); 0.45 (urine, normal/questionable) | WRAMLb; WISC-IVc | Moderate and severe fluorosis were significantly associated with deficits in digit span scores. |
| [ | India, 2015 | 215 | 214 | 6–12 | Drinking water | 2.41 (water, high); 0.19 (water, ref) | RCPMd | IQs of highly exposed children were significantly lower than those with low-level exposure |
| [ | China, 2015 | 84 | 96 | 7–13 | Drinking water, urine | 1.40 (water, high); 0.63 (water, ref); 2.40 (urine, high); 1.10 (urine, ref) | CRT-RCe | Fluoride exposure was negatively associated with children’s IQ |
| [ | India, 2016 | 23 (severe dental fluorosis) | 4 (normal dental fluorosis) | 6–18 | Groundwater and urine | 2.11 (water); 0.45–17.00 (range, urine) | CRT-RCe | IQ was negatively correlated with degree of dental fluorosis |
| [ | China, 2017 | 68 | 50 | 3–12 months | Coal burning vs. control | Mothers in exposed group had dental fluorosis | MDI & PDI (CDCC)f | MDI & PDI in exposed group were significantly lower than those in the control group |
| [ | China, 2017 | 167 | 120 | 8–12 | Coal burning vs. control | Dental fluorosis index 53.9% in exposed group | RSPMa | IQ was lower in children with high fluoride exposure (not significant) |
| [ | China, 2018 | 221 | 100 | 8–12 | Drinking water | 1.2 (water, high); 0.25 and 0.78 (water, controls) | CRT-RCe | IQ was lower in children from endemic areas and in those with dental fluorosis |
| [ | Sudan, 2018 | 775 (total) | N/a | 6–14 | Drinking water | 0.01–2.07 (water) | School performance based on method adopted by MoE | Inverse relationship between fluoride in drinking water and average school performance |
| [ | China, 2018 | 134 | 134 | 8–12 | Dental fluorosis | N/a | CRT-RCe | IQ was lower in children from endemic areas |
| [ | Egypt, 2018 | 186 | 814 | 4.6–11 | Drinking water | 0.92–3.75 (water) | DAPg | Decreased scores in children from areas with elevated fluoride in drinking water |
| [ | China, 2018 | 1250 | 1636 | 7–13 | Drinking water and urine | 2.00 | CRT-RC2e | IQ was lower in children at higher fluoride in water and urine and at greater severity of dental fluorosis |
| [ | China, 2019 | 25 | 27 | 8–12 | Drinking water | N/a | CRT-RC2e | IQ was lower at elevated fluoride exposure |
| [ | China, 2020 | 571 (total) | N/a | 7–13 | Drinking water, urine | 1.39 + 1.01 (water); 1.28 + 1.30 (urine) | CRT-RC2e | Low to moderate fluoride exposure is associated with alterations in thyroid function and lower IQ |
aRaven’s Standardized Progressive Matrices; bWide Range Assessment of Memory and Learning; cWechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised; dRaven’s Colored Progressive Matrices; eCombined Raven’s Test-The Rural in China; fmental development index & psychomotor development index (assessed using the Standardized Scale for the Intelligence of Children formulated by the Children Development Center of China; gDAP, Draw-A-Person
Characteristics of the five prospective studies of fluoride exposure and children’s cognitive and neurobehavioral, developmental and cognitive outcomes
| Reference | Study location, year | No. in high-exposure group | No. in reference group | Age range (or mean), years | Fluoride exposure | Outcome measure | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assessment | Range or mean (mg/L) | |||||||
| [ | New Zealand, 1986 | 1028 (total) | N/a | 0–7 | Drinking water fluoridation | N/a | RBSa and CBRSb | No association between duration of residence in fluoridated community and behavioral problems |
| [ | New Zealand, 2015 | 992 (total) | N/a | 5 and 7–13 | Water fluoridation, supplements | N/a | WISCc | No significant association found between tablet use, use of fluoride toothpaste, or childhood community water fluoridation and IQ, respectively |
| [ | Mexico, 2017 | 287 (total) | N/a | 4 and 6–12 | Maternal urinary fluoride (MUF) | 0.88 (mean) | MSCAd; WASIe | Higher MUF levels were associated with lower scores on cognitive function tests in offspring |
| [ | Mexico, 2017 | 211 (total) | N/a | 3–15 months | Drinking water and MUF | 0.5–12.5 (water); 0.16–4.9 (MUF, 1st trimester); 0.7–6.0 (MUF, 2nd trimester); 1.3–8.2 (MUF, 3rd trimester) | BSDI-IIf | MUF levels sampled during the 1st and 2nd trimesters were inversely associated with mental development in infants |
| [ | Canada, 2018 | 275 (city fluoridation) | 335 (no city fluoridation) | 3.4 | MUF, fluoride intake | 0.06–2.44 | WPPSI-IIIg | Higher MUF levels predicted lower IQ in males but not females; higher maternal fluoride intake predicted lower IQ |
aRutter Behavior Rating Scales; bConnors Behavior Rating Scales; cWechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence; dMcCarthy Scales of Children’s Abilities; eWechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence; fBayley Scale of Infant Development II; gWechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence, 3rd edition
Adjusted differences in cognitive outcomes per mg fluoride per liter maternal urine (U-fluoride) during pregnancy, and benchmark dose results (boys and girls) in regard to maternal urinary fluoride excretion (mg/L urine adjusted for creatinine)
| Study | Reference | Number | Outcome | U-fluoride (median) | Estimate | 95% CI | BMD | BMDL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ELEMENT | [ | 287 | GCI | 0.84 | −6.3 | −10.8; − 1.7 | 0.16 | 0.10 |
| ELEMENT | [ | 211 | IQ | 0.82 | −5.0 | −8.2; − 1.2 | 0.20 | 0.13 |
| MIREC | [ | 512 | IQ | 0.51 | −2.0 | − 5.2; 1.3 | 0.51 | 0.21 |