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Mexican Study Shows an Inverse Association between Fluoride Exposure and IQ in Children
Mexican Study Shows an Inverse Association between Fluoride Exposure and IQ in Children

Mexican Study Shows an Inverse Association between Fluoride Exposure and IQ in Children

OP V – 2 Prenatal fluoride exposure and neurobehavior among children 1–3 years of age in Mexico

Author: Thomas D, Sanchez B, Peterson K, Basu N, Martinez-Mier EA, Mercado-Garcia A, Hernandez-Avila M, Till C, Bashash M, Hu H, Tellez-Rojo MM.

Journal Name: Occupational & Environmental Medicine

Publish Date: 03-18-2018

Abstract

Background/aim

Recent studies report an inverse association between fluoride (F) exposure and IQ in children, but few included individual measures of exposure or assessed associations with prenatal exposure using a prospective study design.

Methods

This study utilized the Early Life Exposures in Mexico to Environmental Toxicants (ELEMENT) birth cohort and archived pregnancy samples to study prenatal F exposure and its association with subsequent child neurobehavioral outcomes at ages 1, 2 and 3 years. A Generalised Mixed Model (GMM) was used to model the association between mean creatinine-adjusted urinary F (MUFcr), averaged over three trimesters, and Mental Development Index (MDI), a subscale of the Bayley Scales of Infant Development-II (BSID-II) test, among 401 mother-infant pairs. The analysis controlled for maternal age, education, marital status, ELEMENT cohort, child’s sex, and child’s age.

Results

The median MUFcr was 0.835/mg/L (minimum: 0.195, maximum: 3.673). MUFcr was significantly inversely associated with offspring MDI scores, with an increase in MUFcr of 0.5/mg/L (roughly the interquartile range value) corresponding to a decrease in MDI of -1.20 points (95%CI: -2.19,–0.20).

Conclusion

Our findings add to our team’s recently published report on prenatal fluoride and cognition at ages 4 and 6–12 years by suggesting that higher in utero exposure to F has an adverse impact on offspring cognitive development that can be detected earlier, in the first three years of life.