Fluoride Chemicals Leach Lead Into Water Supplies by Fluoride
Action Network
www.fluoridealert.org
May 23, 2005
Fluoride chemicals, combined with other water additives, pull
health-damaging lead from plumbing systems into drinking
water, according to University of North Carolina researchers,
reported a North Carolina newspaper on May 18, 2005. Fluoride
is added to water supplies to prevent cavities, not purify it
as some believe.
A combination of chloramines and fluorosilicic acid,
especially with extra amounts of ammonia, leaches lead from
meters, solder and plumbing systems, according to Richard P.
Maas, PhD and Steven C. Patch PhD, co-directors of the
Environmental Quality Institute at the University of North
Carolina, Asheville.
Chloramine, a combination of chlorine and ammonia, is a water
supply disinfectant. Fluorosilicic acid, the chemical used by
over 91% of U.S. fluoridating communities, attempts to improve
dental health in those who drink it. About 2/3 of U.S. public
water supplies are fluoridated but tooth decay remains a
national epidemic, according to the U.S. Surgeon General.
Maas said, “Tests showed lead levels three and four times
higher in water with that combination of chemicals …About 500
systems, across the country, have switched to chloramine
treatment since 2001…and most also use fluorosilicic acid,”
according to the North Carolina newspaper, the News &
Observer.
Maas said this chemical interaction could be responsible for
the elevated lead levels recently plaguing Greenville, North
Carolina. Health authorities issued a lead advisory for water
from the Greenville Utilities Commission when elevated lead
levels showed up in 26 of 106 sampled homes.
Water leaving the plant and its distribution lines does not
contain lead. But testing showed two children with harmful
lead levels, leading health officials to speculate that
corrosion of pipes within the home may be the cause.
Greenville authorities warned pregnant and breastfeeding women
and children under age six to avoid the tap water until it is
tested for lead.
Maas, who heads a lead poisoning prevention program in Western
North Carolina funded by the federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, said his lab has tested more than
150,000 homes across the country in the past 18 years and
found that 10 to 15 percent have a significant lead
contamination problem, according to the News & Observer
article.
“No amount of lead is safe for a young child’s developing
brain,” says Paul Connett, PhD, Professor of environmental
chemistry and toxicology at St. Lawrence University in Canton,
NY and Executive Director of the Fluoride Action Network.
“If this new data is confirmed, it will further underscore the
negligence of U.S. authorities using fluorosilicic acid as a
fluoridating agent in the absence of any research establishing
the safety of this particular fluoride chemical,” says Connett.
These new findings may help explain earlier published,
peer-reviewed research by Roger Masters, PhD of Dartmouth
College and Michael Coplan. Their studies show a link between
water fluoridation status and elevated blood lead in children.
Elevated blood lead levels are linked to developmental delays
in children under age six and fetuses. Lead can adversely
affect almost every organ and system in the body. The most
sensitive is the central nervous system, particularly in
children. Lead also damages kidneys and the reproductive
system. The effects are the same whether it is breathed or
swallowed.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
"fluoride works primarily after teeth have erupted."
"It really doesn't make any sense to ingest fluoride
chemicals, anyway. Fluoridation is an outdated concept, wastes
money, jeopardizes health and should be stopped everywhere,"
says Connett.