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Indybay Feature

Bottled Water NOT linked to tooth decay, dentists admit

by Sally Stride
Despite media reports,"There has been no research to show using bottled water causes tooth decay," reports American Dental Association spokesman Dr. Johnathan Shenkin in a Healthday.com article.
"There has been no research to show using bottled water causes tooth decay," reports American Dental Association spokesman Dr. Johnathan Shenkin in a Healthday.com article.

Dr. Burton Edelstein agrees. He is president of the DC-based Children's Dental Health Project and Columbia University dentistry professor who describes the increasing prevalence of tooth decay among young children as "alarming."

"[Today] one in 10 2-year olds, one in five 3-year olds, one in three 4-year olds and approaching half of 5-year-olds have visually evident tooth decay experience," he said, adding that "the consequences in terms of pain, infection, dysfunction and unmet treatment need are significant.” Edelstein told Healthday.com

No US child is fluoride-deficient. But up to 60% show signs of fluoride-overdose (dental fluorosis), Tooth decay rates are soaring despite 67 years of fluoridation, 57 years of fluoridated toothpaste, a glut of fluoridated dental products, and a fluoride-saturated food supply.

The U.S. Surgeon General reports that excessive fluoride increases susceptibility to cavities.

To avoid crippling skeletal fluorosis, the Environmental Protection Agency sets 4 parts per million (ppm) or 4 milligrams per quart of water as a “safe” water level.. Many Americans exceed that amount from all sources.

The Iowa Fluoride Study's principal investigator, Steven Levy, found that some babies ingest 6 milligrams fluoride daily. Furthermore, Levy found 90% of 3-month-olds consumed over their recommended fluoride levels. "There is no specific nutritional requirement for fluoride...,” Levy et al. admit.

Levy also found:

-- 77% of soft drinks had fluoride levels greater than 0.60 ppm
-- two ounces of baby chicken food provides baby's maximum dose
-- foods high in fluoride -- teas, dry infant cereals, dried chicken, and
seafood
-- grape juice, especially white, contains very high fluoride levels
-- 42% of juice and juice drinks tested revealed unlabeled fluoride levels
greater than 0.60 ppm
-- cereals processed in fluoridated areas contain from 3.8 to 6.3 ppm
fluoride

The USDA provides a database of fluoride contents of food
http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/Data/Fluoride/Fluoride.html

Reports that bottled-water drinkers risk more cavities are
unsubstantiated. The Wall Street Journal reported, "Little research has been done on the use of bottled water and risk of tooth decay, dental experts concede.

"For children's dental health measures, it was found that fluoridation rates were not significantly related to the measures of either caries or overall condition of the teeth for urban or rural areas." (West Virginia University Rural Health Research Center, 2012)

"It may...be that fluoridation of drinking water does not have a strong protective effect against early childhood caries (cavities)," reports dentist Howard Pollick, University of California, and colleagues, in the Winter 2003 Journal of Public Health Dentistry.

Even when fluoridated water is the most consumed item, cavities are extensive when diets are poor, according to Caries Research.

Burt and colleagues studied low-income African-American adults, 14-years-old and over, living in Detroit, Michigan, where water suppliers add fluoride chemicals attempting to prevent cavities. Yet, 83%of this population has severe tooth decay and diets high in sugars and fats, and low in fruits and vegetables.

"The most frequently reported food on a daily basis was [fluoridated] tap water," write Burt's research team. Second were [probably fluoridated] soft drinks and third were potato chips.

Tooth decay in fluoridated Detroit's toddlers' teeth is also shocking. Almost all of Detroit's five-year-olds have cavities; most of them go unfilled.

The scientific literature now tells us that ingesting fluoride does not reduce tooth decay so it’s no surprise that drinking fluoride-free bottled water is not linked to higher rates of tooth decay and that people who drink fluoridated tap water are not experiencing less tooth decay.
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by ToothTruth
Carol Kopf of NYCOF, I haven't seen your alter-ego "Sally Stride" for quite some time.

Sally, as does NYCOF, tries to bend an article's information into a sensational headline: "Bottle Water NOT linked to tooth decay, dentists admit". What Dr. Shenkin stated as one reads later in your cherry-picked post is that there hasn't been a definitive study trying to link an actual causal relationship between bottled water vs. fluoridated drinking water and cavities. In other words no study has been done on the subject, been scrutinized carefully by a peer reviewed panel, before appearing in the National Library of Medicine, the largest on-line scientific library in the world.

Unlike you, the Fluoride Action Network, and your group of "merry pranksters", you all go fine studies in the most polluted countries in the world (eg. China, India), find studies on fluoride and IQ that are poorly designed, have nothing to do with water fluoridation, and are never found in the National Library of Medicine. Yet, you will post sensational headlines stating that children who grow up with fluoridation have a lower IQ.

You mention crippling dental fluorosis. There have been 5 reported cases in the United States in the last 40 years, none of which have anything to do with water fluoridation. You also misrepresent the CDC data on fluorosis. There is no mention of "up to 60 %" in the CDC's latest data on the subject. You also don't mention that 96+ % is questionable, very mild, and mild dental fluorosis: a minor cosmetic condition that often only a trained dental professional will see or notice.

Paracelus said it well back in the 16th century: "All substances are toxic. There are none that are not. The difference between a remedy and a toxin is dosage". Fluoridation is a 20th Century adaptation of a naturally occurring process. 0.7 Parts Per Million is NOT toxic. Fluoride doesn't "cure" dental cavities, but it helps "prevent" cavities. 204 million Americans today enjoy the public health benefit of fluoridated water.

Regarding personal choice, I will end my post with a quote from Dr. John Harris of the University of Manchester in England:

“We should ask not are we entitled to impose fluoridation on unwilling people, but are the unwilling people entitled to impose the risks, damage & costs of the failure to fluoridate on the community at large? When we compare the freedoms at stake, the most crucial is surely the one which involves liberation from pain and disease.”
by ramicio
Finally, some voice of reason. Natural water sources already have enough fluoride. We only need trace amounts. The garbage they put in water is toxic waste from mining, so I will put quotes around the word "fluoride" from now on to mean the toxic waste they put in water.. It IS a commie plot to undermine public health. They WEREN'T wrong about this in the '50s and '60s. No public water should have "fluoride" added to it. If people want to take additional "fluoride," they should elect to do so and get it in a pill.

I use fluoride-free toothpaste and I happen to live in a water system with zero added "fluoride." I've never had a cavity in my life besides a rotten wisdom tooth that could not be brushed because it wouldn't come all the way out and was mostly covered by gum. I also do not have the typical trendy bright white teeth. Teeth are not supposed to be as white as can be. Maybe they ought to look into what constant whitening and dental cleaning are doing to teeth. I never see the dentist. I don't floss. I simply use common sense. I brush my teeth twice a day and I don't consume sugary/corn-syrupy crap/soda/candy.
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