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“I’ll take a burger and fries,
hold the fluoride.” Fluoride?
Serious scientists, who look, find
fluoride in the darnedest places. Researchers from the University
of Indiana School of Dentistry report in the scientific journal
“Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology” that McDonald’s
French fries deliver more than guilty pleasure.
Your teeth bite into 0.13
milligrams fluoride along with that small portion of McDonald’s
fries that goes upward to 0.38 mg in the supersize.
So why do we need to know that?
Because of fluoridation, where
water engineers purposely add fluoride to water supplies to reduce
tooth decay, and the billion dollar fluoride products industry,
many Americans are fluoride over-dosed. As a result, over half of
US children sport dental fluorosis, white-spotted, yellow or brown
permanently stained teeth. This study shows children risk
fluorosis from their daily diet even when their water supplies are
not fluoridated.
Unsightly fluorosis is expensive to
cover up. In fact, Americans spend more to cover-up fluorosis than
they would save filling cavities if fluoridation reduced tooth
decay. Too much ingested fluoride also damages bones, without any
overt outward signs. So we must use children’s teeth as the
“canary” that warns the population of danger.
Unfortunately, most dentists
don’t keep current on fluoride research and encourage fluoride
in more and varied ways while researchers warnings to prescribe
with caution remain buried in the medical literature.
At age three to five, permanent
front teeth form under the gums. So fluoride ingestion has to be
especially monitored during this time. To avoid fluorosis the
National Academy of Science advises the following daily fluoride
intake from all sources (food, air, water, medicines, and
supplements):
· infants up to 6 months old -
less than 0.01 mg · babies from 6 - 12 months less than 0.5 mg ·
children from 1 to 3 years old - 0.7 mg · children from 4 to 8
years old - less than 1 mg
The above-mentioned study shows
small children often exceed these dosages from food alone.
Two slices of “Iron Kids Bread”
dose your kids teeth with about 0.08 milligrams fluoride. While
two slices of “Aunt Millie’s Homestyle Buttermilk White
Bread” releases only .03 mg. Five and one half ounces of Lay’s
baked potato chips confers 0.20 mg fluoride, while, the same
amount of Ruffles delivers .11 fluoride
Many other studies reveal hidden
fluoride in jarred baby chicken food, chicken sticks and luncheon
meat. Forty two percent of juices contain more fluoride than
recommended for small children. And 71% of sodas contain more than
.6 ppm fluoride (0.6 milligrams per litre or quart).
Ironically, while the fluoride in
soda contributes to dental fluorosis, fluoride can’t help teeth
eroded by soda.
"Premature loss of tooth
enamel and weakening of overall tooth structure are two
devastating oral effects of teens' poor diet that can not be
reversed later in life," explains Jane Soxman, DDS, author of
a new study that appears in the January/ February 2003 issue of
General Dentistry, the Academy of General Dentistry's (AGD)
clinical, peer-reviewed journal.
Incredibly, the AGD recommends
"Before bed, rub toothpaste containing fluoride along the gum
line and leave it to soak in the gum line while sleeping." We
doubt there is any science to support this. Why would dentists
encourage patients to put toxic doses of fluoride (up to 1500 ppm)
in their mouths for up to 8 hours or more? Maybe it highlights
their ignorance about fluoride's adverse health effects when
fluoride gets inadvertently swallowed or absorbed into the
bloodstream. Maybe they need to read the back of toothpaste boxes.

Children must brush with just a
pea-sized (some say less) amount of fluoridated toothpaste, and
rinse and spit under parents supervision to ensure they don't
swallow any.
It seems too many dentists snoozed
through nutrition and fluoride classes.
Instead of discouraging soda
consumption, the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD)
has entered into a partnership with Coca Cola. Charging the
“AAPD has made a deal with the devil,” the Center For Science
in the Public Interest calls soda “liquid candy,” and urges
the “AAPD, for the sake of children's health and the
organization's own credibility, not to consummate any financial
relationship with Coca-Cola or other junk-food marketer.”
Find out how much fluoride is in
the foods you and children consume each day: http://www.bruha.com/pfpc/html/f-_in_foo...
Also see “Infant foods and
fluoride” http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/1174...
Other sources of fluoride to
consider are from toothpaste, dental treatments, dentists filling
material, sealants and varnish. Fluoride is naturally in tea and
ocean fish, is inhaled from coal burning buildings (some New York
City schools are coal-burning facilities), ocean mist and
humidifiers using fluoridated water. Fluoride is in some
medicines, is an industrial air pollutant and is a component of
many pesticide residues that remain on fruits and vegetables.

URL: http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/11749/98946
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