Dr. Hardy Limeback BSc PhD (Biochemistry) DDS — Fluoridation and baby bottle tooth decay
October 4, 2012 By dhlb
Fluoridation
and baby bottle tooth decay
Can breast
feeding cause early childhood caries (rampant dental decay in toddlers)?
Does fluoride
in the drinking water reduce the incidence of early childhood caries?
Can adding
fluoride to drinking water reduce the prevalence or severity of baby bottle
tooth decay?
Some
background
When I first announced that I was publicly opposed to
water fluoridation I received many heated phone calls and emails from upset
dental care professionals, even from friends. I was distraught. My dental
office routine was disrupted. My family was negatively affected (my wife is my
dental office manager). I discovered that criticizing fluoridation produced a
lot of emotional and negative reactions within the dental community.
I received an email from a dental hygienist working
for public health in the province of BC (almost the entire province is
https://www.blogger.com/null
When I was invited to Salem, Oregon to help the citizens fight a mandatory water fluoridation bill, a pediatric dentist showed a video of a screaming toddler who was being treated for rampant dental decay. It was a clear attempt to elicit sympathy from the audience … and it did.
Parents don’t want their kids to suffer. Videos intended to pull on the heart strings of parents are effective. Videos and photos of toddlers with rampant dental decay are often shown at hearings where the city council or citizens have to decide on the policy of whether or not to add fluoridation chemicals to the drinking water. In my opinion, the tactic of using a traumatic dental visit where a toddler with baby bottle tooth decay has to have several teeth repaired at once is disingenuous and merely a scare tactic.
Breast vs. bottle milk
Prehistoric dental decay in children
Baby bottle tooth decay and early childhood caries are modern diseases. Dr. Brian Palmer, who recently passed away, was a dentist in Kansas who studied the benefits of breast feeding in relationship to jaw development and early childhood caries. He went to the Smithsonian Natural Museum in Washington D.C. to examine the skulls of prehistoric Native Americans. Out of 1344 ‘baby teeth’, only 1.4% had any signs of decay. Only FOUR teeth had large cavities. The following is a typical image of the prehistoric native infant found in the Plains of South Dakota.
http://www.brianpalmerdds.com
Breast milk never did cause any tooth decay in prehistoric children. It was Dr. Palmer’s contention that “It would be evolutionary suicide for breast milk to cause decay.”
It is now well known that indigenous populations eating processed food (a ‘western diet’) have dental decay problems. Decay rates are extremely high now in some regions where aboriginal people live, largely if not entirely because of the change in diet from the ‘hunter-gatherer’ traditional diet to one of processed food high in sugars and low in nutrition. This was well documented in the book by Weston A. Price, first published in 1939 (Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, 6th edition, Price-Pottenger Nutrition Foundation). I personally experienced how difficult it was to manage dental decay problems in children when I worked as a young dentist in the Sioux Lookout region near James Bay in Ontario. I was told by the local nurse practitioner that families were in the habit of putting their toddlers to bed with a bottle filled with sugar water or cola soft drinks, because they could not afford to purchase fresh cows’ milk or formula powder.
Why the baby bottle damages teeth
Baby bottle tooth decay can be very serious. As shown in this example image, graciously provided with permission from Dr. Palmer’s widow, one can see how every single baby tooth has severe tooth decay. A number of those baby teeth would have to be extracted because they are infected.
Baby bottle tooth decay
Most
mothers realize that putting babies to bed with a bottle containing sugary
drinks is a mistake. Even milk from a baby bottle can cause severe dental decay
because of the natural sugar content. Milk contains the disaccharide lactose.
It isn’t as dangerous as table sugar (sucrose) but it still can cause tooth
decay.
The difference between breast milk and the baby
bottle, according to Dr. Palmer, is that the baby requires some effort to
‘latch on’ and work with a forceful sucking motion to express the breast milk.
Breast milk is expressed further in the back of the oral cavity past the teeth.
With commercial bottles, there is no effort to drink milk from the rubber
nipples, which tend to leak resulting in the pooling of milk on the teeth as
baby falls asleep. Once asleep, saliva flow diminishes and does not fight off
the acid produced by the metabolism of lactose by plaque bacteria. Furthermore,
there are important anti-cavity factors that are in human breast milk (Erickson
& Mazhari, 1999).
Research shows that prolonged nighttime feeding with
breast milk does not increase the risk for ‘nursing caries’ (I find the term
nursing caries to be a misnomer because some dentists believe that early
childhood caries can be caused by nighttime feeding at the breast). The large
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) study in the US
concluded: “these data provide no evidence to suggest that breastfeeding or its
duration are independent risk factors for early childhood caries, severe early
childhood caries, or decayed and filled surfaces on primary teeth.” Iida (2007)
Weerheijm (1998) reported that in Holland “…
prolonged demand breast-feeding does not lead to a higher caries prevalence”
In the UK, Cartwright argued that breast milk does
not cause dental decay.
Nunes (2012) reported that, “the present results
showed that prolonged breast-feeding was not a risk factor for ECC after
adjustment for a handful of important confounders.”
In fact, from the largest lactation study ever
conducted it was concluded that, “Extended breast feeding (to 12 mo.) did not
provide any significant benefit or harm” (Kramer et al, 2007).”
Abbey expressed this position in an article in the
Journal of the American Dental Association as early as 1979 and yet the
American Dental Association continues to offer the following statement on their
website: “Unrestricted, at-will nocturnal breastfeeding after eruption of the
child’s first tooth can lead to an increased risk of caries”. http://www.ada.org/2057.aspx
What else causes early childhood tooth
decay?
We know breast milk doesn’t cause early childhood dental decay but putting the
baby to bed at night with a bottle filled with sugary liquid or even milk can
cause rampant dental decay.
What are other reasons why toddlers get
rampant tooth decay?
About 5 toddlers/preschoolers out of 100 have severe dental decay (Al-Jewair
& Leake, 2010).
This prevalence seems to have increased recently in 2-5 year olds (Kagihara et
al. 2009)
There are many risk factors that predispose a preschooler to dental decay in
the primary dentition. These include
1. low vitamin D levels (Schroth et al, 2012)
2. enamel defects (Caufield et al, 2012),
3. second hand smoke (Hanioka et al, 2011)
4. social disparities which result in more frequent sugar intake, more soda pop
intake, less milk consumption, and less access to dental services (Vadiakas,
2008; Mobley et al, 2009).
Severe dental
decay can occur even when the above risk factors are not present
Once the child is weaned off the bottle or breast and
introduced to ‘adult’ foods, the risk for caries increases. Substituting milk
for juices is the first obvious problem because of the loss of calcium intake
and a switch to the more destructive sugars fructose and, in most cases, added
sucrose. Allowing the child to have on demand access to drinks sweetened with
sucrose through a ‘sippy cup’ increases the risk even further. Lack of oral
hygiene and increased consumption of other carbohydrates rather than foods rich
in protein and fibre, compounds the problem. Of course, many toddlers who
express their dissatisfaction through crying are often ‘comforted’ by treats
sweetened with sugar. So often I see parents capitulating to a crying child at
the check-out counter in the grocery stores offering that child a candy or
chocolate treat to avoid the stress and embarrassment of the child causing a
disturbance in a public place. Dentists often report preschoolers coming to the
office with chocolate bars in hand. Parents admit to using candy treats at
every turn to ‘bribe’ their kids. On top of all this, medications administered
at nighttime are laced with sugar (to entice the preschoolers to take them).
No wonder that the dental profession thinks we need
fluoridation. But will fluoridation at 0.7 ppm really help early childhood
caries? Not according to the research literature.
Fluoridation
does little to reduce Early Childhood Caries
Looking at the children in the Head Start Program in
the US, Barnes discovered that, “children attending centers showed no
significant differences based on fluoride status for the total sample or other
variables.” (Barnes et al, 1992).
Howard Pollick, a profluoridation spokesperson for
the American Dental Association, has written articles in favour of fluoridation
but in this study which he co-authored, it was reported that fluoridated water
had no influence on early childhood caries. “Our analysis did not appear to be
affected by whether or not children lived in an area with fluoridated water.”
(Shiboski et al, 2003).
Community water fluoridation did not appear to
provide a cost benefit in the UK (Kowash et al, 2006).
In Brazil, living in a fluoridated community did not
make any difference in early childhood caries (Tiano 2009).
However, in a recent small study in Australia,
fluoridated water used in infant formula reduced caries risk marginally but
only in those infants fed longer than 6 months (Do et al, 2012). It must be
remembered that infant formula made with tap water increases the risk of dental
fluorosis (see
blog on fluorosis) and fluorosis is associated
with lowered intelligence (Choi et al, 2012).
Even if there were small positive effects on baby
bottle tooth decay by living in a community with fluoridated water, the other
health risks from ingesting fluoride are not worth it.
A much more effective way to reduce early childhood
caries is to educate low income families on how to prevent it (Feldens et al,
2010)
New moms, once empowered with science-based
knowledge, will do everything in their power to properly protect their kids
from the pain and suffering that rampant caries brings. No mother wants to see
her child placed under general anesthetic and then pay thousands of dollars in
dental repair costs.
Rather than put millions of dollars into fluoridation
programs, cities would be better off providing oral health education, dietary
advice and assistance to families in need.
Challenge to
the reader: If there is a new mom in the
family, send her the link to this blog so that she can read about how important
breast feeding is and how damaging it is to allow babies to sleep with a bottle
in their mouth. Confront health care professionals who believe water
fluoridation will prevent baby bottle tooth decay, and also send them the link
to this blog.
Take home
message for the reader: Breast milk does
not cause decay in baby teeth and water fluoridation does not prevent baby
bottle tooth decay.
References:
Abbey LM (1979) Is breast feeding a likely cause of
dental caries in young children? J Am Dent Assoc. 98(1):21-3.
Al-Jewair TS, Leake JL. (2010) The prevalence and
risks of early childhood caries (ECC) in Toronto, Canada. J Contemp Dent Pract.
11(5):001-8.
Barnes GP, Parker WA, Lyon TC Jr, Drum MA, Coleman
GC. (1992) Ethnicity, location, age, and fluoridation factors in baby bottle
tooth decay and caries prevalence of Head Start children. Public Health Rep.
1992.
Cartwright A. (2008) Breast is Best. British Dental
Journal 204: 351 – 352.
Caufield PW, Li Y, Bromage TG. (2012)
Hypoplasia-associated severe early childhood caries–a proposed definition. J
Dent Res. 91(6):544-50.
Choi AL, Sun G, Zhang Y, Grandjean P. (2012)
Developmental Fluoride Neurotoxicity: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
Environ Health Perspect. Jul 20. (Ahead of print)
Do LG, Levy SM, Spencer AJ. (2012) Association
between infant formula feeding and dental fluorosis and caries in Australian
children. J Public Health Dent.72(2):112-21.
Erickson PR, Mazhari E. (1999) Investigation of the
role of human breast milk in caries development. Pediatr Dent. 21(2):86-90.
Feldens CA, Giugliani ER, Duncan BB, Drachler Mde L,
Vítolo MR.(2010) Long-term effectiveness of a nutritional program in reducing
early childhood caries: a randomized trial. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol.
38(4):324-32.
Hanioka T, Ojima M, Tanaka K, Yamamoto M. (2011) Does
second hand smoke affect the development of dental caries in children? A
systematic review. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 8(5):1503-19.
Iida H, Auinger P, Billings RJ, Weitzman M. (2007)
Association between infant breastfeeding and early childhood caries in the
United States. Pediatrics. 120(4):e944-52.
Kagihara LE, Niederhauser VP, Stark M. (2009)
Assessment, management, and prevention of early childhood caries. J Am Acad
Nurse Pract. 21(1):1-10.
Kim Seow W. (2012) Environmental, maternal, and child
factors which contribute to early childhood caries: a unifying conceptual
model. Int J Paediatr Dent. 22(3):157-68.
Kowash MB, Toumba KJ, Curzon ME. (2006)
Cost-effectiveness of a long-term dental health education program for the prevention
of early childhood caries. Eur Arch Paediatr Dent. 7(3):130-5.
Kramer MS, Vanilovich I, Matush L, Bogdanovich N,
Zhang X, Shishko G, Muller-Bolla M, Platt RW. (2007) The effect of prolonged
and exclusive breast-feeding on dental caries in early school-age children. New
evidence from a large randomized trial. Caries Res 41(6):484-8.
Mobley C, Marshall TA, Milgrom P, Coldwell SE. (2009)
The contribution of dietary factors to dental caries and disparities in caries.
Acad Pediatr. 2009 9(6):410-4.
Nunes AM Alves CMC, Arau´ jo FB, Ortiz TML, Ribeiro
MRC, Silva AAM, Ribeiro CCC. (2012) Association between prolonged
breast-feeding and early childhood caries: a hierarchical approach. Community
Dent Oral Epidemiol. Online Jun 23 (ahead of print).
Schroth RJ, Jeal NS, Kliewer E, Sellers EA. (2012)
The relationship between vitamin D and severe early childhood caries: a pilot
study. Int J Vitam Nutr Res. 82(1):53-62.
Shiboski CH, Gansky SA, Ramos-Gomez F, Ngo L, Isman
R, Pollick HF. (2003) The association of early childhood caries and
race/ethnicity among California preschool children. J Public Health Dent.
63(1):38-46.
Tiano AV, Moimaz SA, Saliba O, Saliba NA. (2009)
Dental caries prevalence in children up to 36 months of age attending daycare
centers in municipalities with different water fluoride content. J Appl Oral
Sci. 17(1):39-44.
Vadiakas G. (2008) Case definition, aetiology and
risk assessment of early childhood caries (ECC): a revisited review. Eur Arch
Paediatr Dent. 9(3):114-25.
Weerheijm KL, Uyttendaele-Speybrouck BF, Euwe HC,
Groen HJ. (1998) Prolonged demand breast-feeding and nursing caries. Caries
Res.32(1):46-50.
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