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FDA ADDS POISON WARNING TO FLUORIDE TOOTHPASTE
THE
WASHINGTON POST
June 16, 1997
June 16, 1997
Toothpaste:
How Safe?
By Don
Oldenburg
Washington Post Staff Writer
Washington Post Staff Writer
Last month, as 8-year-old Molly
Statt stood in the bathroom brushing her teeth, something on the back of the
large-size tube of Crest caught her attention. She stopped brushing.
Looking
up at her father standing beside her, she motioned to the toothpaste and asked, “Is this poison?”
“Of course not,” Paul Statt
reassured his daughter.
“Then why does it say ‘poison’
on it?” she asked.
Statt looked closer at the
label on the back of tube. In small print were warnings he hadn’t noticed
before, including one that read: “If you accidentally swallow more than used
for brushing, seek professional help or contact a poison control center immediately.”
Caught off guard, he didn’t
have a good answer for Molly. For a week or so afterward, she didn’t want to
brush with toothpaste. Now she is back to using it, but Statt worries that
she’s confused about the safety of toothpaste and about the truth of poison
labels. “When did they start putting a poison warning on toothpaste tubes?” he
asks.
Like most people, the
Petersborough, N.H., resident assumed that an over-the-counter health care
product like toothpaste, which we are encouraged to put in our mouths “at least
twice daily,” must certainly be as safe as the water we drink. But it’s not.
And that’s the message of the new warning labels required by the Food and Drug
Administration on all fluoride toothpastes and dental care products shipped as
of April 7.
None of the caveats that began
appearing on toothpaste tubes in 1991 so candidly broached the risks of
ingesting too much fluoride. General warnings on toothpaste products that
display the American Dental Association seal of approval heretofore cautioned:
“Don’t Swallow — Use only a pea-sized amount for children under six,” and
“Children under 6 should be supervised while brushing with any toothpaste to
prevent swallowing.” The word “poison” wasn’t used.
“When I receive the fluoride
here, it has a skull-and-bones on it,” Regina Miskewitz says of containers of
the chemical at the Princeton, N.J., laboratories of Church & Dwight Co.
Inc., maker of Arm & Hammer products, where she is director of research and
development for oral and personal care.
“If a child was to take a big
spoonful of this fluoride, I don’t think he could swallow it,” she says, “but
if he did get it down, it is a poison and the child could die. If a child
ingested a whole tube of toothpaste, he should be taken right to the emergency room
and he would either get his stomach pumped or get some kind of antidote.”
Three ingredients found in most
toothpastes pose health risks if too much is ingested, according to Miskewitz.
Sorbitol, a liquid that keeps toothpaste from drying out, is a laxative that
could cause diarrhea in children. Sodium lauryl sulfate, an ingredient that
makes toothpaste foam, can also be a diarrheic. But the fluoride poses the most
danger if too much toothpaste is swallowed — particularly to younger children.
“Small amounts of this material
go a long way in causing disruption in their bodies because they are so small,”
Miskewitz says. “The fluoride in toothpaste is considered a drug. Even though
it is an over-the-counter drug, we are altering the body when we brush our teeth
with a fluoride toothpaste or tooth gel. . . . As normal consumers, you’re not
aware of these things. But I’m sure our 800 number is going to get more calls
as products with the new warnings show up on store shelves.”
This summer, as toothpaste
shipments with the new labeling replace older inventories, consumers will see
nearly twice the warnings displayed on the back of tubes and cartons — the
ADA’s general warnings along with the new FDA-required statement that starts
with: “Keep out of the reach of children under 6 years of age.”
Research has shown that because
they aren’t yet in control of their swallowing reflex, children 4 to 6 years
old typically swallow toothpaste when brushing. “That’s why it’s recommended
that kids get only a pea-size amount of toothpaste,” says Miskewitz, “because
most of that goes down their throats.”
A 1995 study at the Medical
College of Georgia School of Dentistry found that about half the children this
age don’t spit out or rinse out — they swallow the toothpaste instead. Making
matters worse, they tend to use too much toothpaste on their own — especially
when they use flavored children’s toothpastes.
While the cavity-preventing
effectiveness of fluoride has been demonstrated, too much fluoride not only can
be dangerous, it can cause a condition known as fluorosis that discolors or
spots developing teeth. Research conducted by the School of Dental Medicine at
the University of Connecticut Health Center concluded that brushing with more
than a pea-size amount of toothpaste more than once daily contributed to most
of the fluorosis cases it observed in young children. In areas where the
drinking water contains fluoride, children who swallow even the pea-size amount
of toothpaste are getting too much fluoride and are at risk for fluorosis.
“I haven’t heard of problems
beyond fluorosis, but that’s a valid concern. There are some kids getting too
much fluoride,” says Nancy Rosenzweig, vice president of corporate
communication and market development at Tom’s of Maine, which in 1975 introduced
the first “natural” toothpaste on the market.
“That’s why Tom Chappell
started making toothpaste. He was in his bathroom reading ingredient labels and
saying ‘You know, there’s a lot of stuff in here that you really shouldn’t be
putting into your mouth.’ ”
Besides its natural toothpastes
that contain fluoride, the small Kennebunkport-based company makes a
nonfluoride toothpaste in flavors including “cinnamint” and “fennel.” When
Tom’s recently began marketing its new line of natural toothpaste for children,
it left out the synthetic sweeteners, neon colors and bubble gum flavors. But
the toothpastes, called Silly Strawberry and Outrageous Orange, contain the
same levels of fluoride as competitors’ toothpastes.
“It is always kind of a
trade-off,” explains Rosenzweig. “We made a decision to have only fluoride
toothpaste for children because that has been proven to be the overall benefit
of toothpaste for children. We feel the benefit outweighs the negative.”
As for natural fruit flavorings
being more attractive to a child’s taste buds than mint-flavored adult
toothpastes, Rosenzweig says Tom’s chose wholesome flavors that would lure
children to brushing. “You have to get the education across to your kids that
you don’t suck the toothpaste down, just as you have to work with your kids to
brush their teeth,” she says. “The alternative is they don’t brush. I guess we
don’t feel like the risk factor is that high to make that trade-off.”
In fact, many in the toothpaste
industry feel the new FDA warnings may be overstating the risks.
“Our position was that they
went a little too far,” says Clifford Whall, director of product evaluations on
the ADA’s Council on Scientific Affairs. “There wasn’t really a need for the
cautionary statement about the danger of poisoning if you’ve ingested too much.
“If children were to sit around
the bathroom eating toothpaste, which younger children could do, there is not
enough fluoride in the toothpaste to cause them any acute harm. That just
doesn’t happen. . . . If you tried to eat a lot of toothpaste, you’d throw it
up.”
While Whall concedes that
poison control centers do receive reports of fluoride “poisonings” every year,
he says the ADA isn’t aware of any of those cases resulting in adverse effects.
“It just hasn’t proven to be that kind of a problem. . . . We didn’t think you
needed a label like that because it could unnecessarily scare consumers into
not using toothpaste.”
Tags: fda, Toothpaste
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