Lead and bad diet
give a kick in the teeth
By S. Carpenter
For decades, the prevalence of childhood cavities has plummeted, thanks
mostly to fluoridated water. But for some children, especially in northeastern
U.S. cities and among the most economically disadvantaged, tooth decay
remains common. A new study implicates lead as a likely cavity culprit.
The finding adds to a series of health problems for which lead may
be to blame, including anemia and impaired mental development. Two other
studies, also released this week, suggest that shortages of calcium
and vitamin C may put children who are already at the greatest risk
for lead exposure in double jeopardy.
In the cavity study, Mark E. Moss of the University of Rochester (N.Y.)
Medical Center and his colleagues analyzed data from a nationally representative
sample of 24,901 children, part of the Third National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES III).
Most of the children's blood contained only a few micrograms of lead
per deciliter, and the current federal guideline for blood-lead concentrations
is 10 mg per deciliter. For children ages 5 to 17, an increased lead
burden of 5 mg per deciliter of blood corresponded to an 80 percent
jump in cavities, Moss and his team report in the June 23/30 Journal
of the American Medical Association (JAMA). They estimate that cavities
of 2.7 million U.S. youngsters result from lead, about 10 percent of
all cases in that age group.
"We've been thinking about tooth decay in a way that's almost like
blaming the victimif your children have tooth decay, it's because
you don't brush their teeth right, or maybe their snacking habits are
bad," Moss says. "This study says that maybe it's beyond that. Maybe
children who are exposed to lead need extra precautions, such as more
fluoride or better hygiene habits, than the average."
Previous studies on people hinted at a link between lead and cavities
but were inconclusive. William H. Bowen, who heads another research
group at the University of Rochester, comments that the new study bolsters
that research, as well as his group's finding that lead exposure causes
cavities in rat pups (SN: 9/6/97, p. 149). "When you put the whole package
together, you've got an extraordinarily convincing story," he says.
The new study doesn't prove that lead causes cavities, Moss notes.
Further research will examine whether, as Bowen's rat research suggests,
lead stunts development of the glands that produce saliva, which protects
teeth from harmful acid and bacteria. Alternatively, lead might hinder
enamel growth, perhaps by blocking fluoride's activity.
Children acquire lead primarily from two sources: lead-based paint,
which is common in homes built before the mid-1970s, and contaminated
soil, a remnant of leaded gasoline exhaust. Because eliminating lead
from the environment would be expensive, if not impossible, John D.
Bogden of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey in
Newark, suggests that the best hope for averting lead poisoning in children
may be the reduction of lead absorption in their gastrointestinal tract.
This can be achieved by boosting the calcium in their diets.
In the June Environmental Health Perspectives, however, Bogden
and his coworkers report insufficient calcium intake among children
living in areas where lead exposure is high. Of the children whose blood
concentrations of lead had been measured, almost half exceeded the federal
guideline.
Bogden's team found that the diet of 31 percent of 175 children ages
1 to 3 years regularly fell below the federally recommended intake of
500 milligrams of calcium per day. Moreover, 59 percent of 139 children
4 to 8 years old took in less than the recommended 800 mg daily. In
both age groups, calcium in the diets of about 7 percent of children
fell far below the requirement for good health. These children took
in less than 200 mg calcium per day.
"It's depressing," Bowen comments. "It's another health burden for
the people who are least able to bear it."
However, Bogden's group also found many children whose calcium intake
was well above the recommended level. "With attention to including dairy
foods in the diet, it's very doable," he says.
A third study, also in the June 23/30 JAMA and using NHANES III data,
finds a link in both children and adults between decreased blood concentrations
of lead and increased concentrations of ascorbic acid, or vitamin C.
If the finding holds up, increasing vitamin C intake could be "a reasonable,
cost-effective way to control lead levels in the population," says author
Joel A. Simon of the University of California, San Francisco.
Even if lead hampers the absorption of vitamin C, rather than the vitamin
flushing out lead, "the bottom line is the same," Simon asserts. People
at high risk for lead toxicity should eat more fruits and vegetables
and consider taking a vitamin C supplement, he says.
In an accompanying editorial, Thomas D. Matte of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention in Atlanta warns that a dietary fix shouldn't
replace efforts to purge lead from the environment. Even if a nutritional
strategy works, he asserts, "reliance on such an intervention places
most of the burden for prevention on those most affected and least responsible
for the underlying environmental causes of lead toxicity."