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http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,176-806982,00.html
Jan Battles, Times on Sunday [Ireland], 7th September 203.
A NEW study has found that children from homes with fluoridated
water have similar levels of dental erosion to those with no
fluoride. It showed that five-year-olds living in fluoridated
areas of Cork had the same degree of erosion of their teeth as
those from non-fluoridated communities.
Researchers at the Oral Health Services Research Centre in Cork
conducted a pilot study to determine the rate of tooth erosion, a
relatively new disease in Ireland. Unlike decay, where bacteria
attack the teeth, dental erosion causes the enamel surface of the
teeth to be gradually dissolved by chemicals, normally from
acidic foods and drink.
Dentists say tooth erosion, which is irreversible, is a growing
problem in Ireland. If unchecked, the hard tissue of the teeth
can be worn down to the internal pulp layer.
Almost half of the youngsters (47%) participating in the pilot
study suffered some erosion of their teeth, and in one in five
cases it had progressed through the enamel to the dentine or pulp
layers. The study, which assessed 202 five-year-olds, was the
first to check the rate of dental erosion in the population.
Children were selected on whether they attended a school with a
fluoridated or non-fluoridated water supply. Researchers also
recorded whether the child's home water supply was fluoridated.
Children with partial fluoride history were excluded from the
analysis.
The report concluded that "no statistical difference existed
between the fluoridated and non-fluoridated groups" even though
less erosion would have been expected in the fluoridated group.
The proportion of children in the fluoridated group with any
erosion was 47% compared with 43% in the non-fluoridated
population. The erosion extended to the dentine in 21% of
children in fluoridated areas compared to 17% of those in
non-fluoridated cases.
"We didn't see any difference between the fluoridated and
non-fluoridated groups," said Mairead Harding, a senior clinical
dental surgeon and one of the report's authors. Approximately 73%
of Irish people receive a fluoridated water supply.
Harding decided to investigate the level of tooth erosion in the
population after noticing a "high proportion of children" had the
disease during routine check-ups. "As a clinical practitioner it
was something that seemed to be coming in to the surgery more and
more. So we wanted to look on a population base to see what the
levels were in the community," she said.
The amount of soft drinks a child consumed was a factor. The
five-year-olds who drank carbonated drinks once a day or more had
significantly more dental erosion to dentine level (29%) than
those who consumed carbonated drinks less than once a day (17%).
"Milk and water are the kindest and safest drinks for teeth,"
said Harding. "Acidic foods and drinks should be limited to meal
times and frequency should be reduced."
Dental erosion leaves the surface of teeth looking very smooth
and glassy, and over time it becomes thinner and eventually chips
and cracks.
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