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Study Links Lead to Tooth Decay NEW YORK (Reuters Health)--Environmental exposure to lead may increase the risk of developing cavities, results of a new study suggest. The study of nearly 25,000 people found that those with high levels of lead in their blood were more likely to have cavities than their counterparts with lower blood levels of lead. The findings, published in Wednesday's issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association, indicate that approximately 2.7 million excess cases of dental caries (cavities) in older children and adolescents may be related to environmental lead exposure. Tooth decay and dental caries are an important public health problem. By age 17, 84 percent of U.S. adolescents have experienced tooth decay in their permanent teeth, involving an average of eight tooth surfaces. The annual treatment costs for dental caries in the United States are estimated to be at least $4.5 billion. The new study does not definitively show that lead exposure causes cavities or how it may do so but if it is proved that environmental lead exposure causes dental caries, "it would have important implications concerning the need to broaden the focus of health interventions for dental caries beyond modifying dietary habits, improving personal oral hygiene behaviors, and increasing fluoride exposure in high-risk groups," conclude Dr. Mark E. Moss of the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry in Rochester, New York, and colleagues. The researchers point out that disadvantaged children and adults are known to have higher rates of cavities than their wealthier counterparts. "The results of the present analyses suggest that environmental lead exposure may explain, at least in part, the disproportionately high rate of dental caries among disadvantaged children and adolescents," according to the report. To arrive at their findings, Moss and colleagues compared findings from dental examinations with blood lead levels among 24,901 people aged two and older. Elevated blood lead levels were associated with risk of cavities in baby and permanent teeth in all age groups, the study found. Among children aged five to 17, a 5 microgram per deciliter of blood increase in blood lead level was associated with an 80 percent higher risk of tooth decay. Researchers estimate that 13.5 percent of tooth decay among five to 17 year olds is attributable to high levels of lead exposure and 9.6 percent of the tooth decay is attributable to moderate levels of lead exposure. While previous studies have linked lead exposure to cavities in animals, this is the first study to identify such a link in humans. In an editorial accompanying the study, Dr. Thomas D. Matte of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia, writes that "by focusing prevention efforts on vulnerable populations exposed to immediate lead hazards, progress toward the virtual eradication of childhood lead toxicity can be greatly accelerated." Source: The Journal of the American Medical Association 1999;281:2294-2298.
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