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HAZARDS LURK IN TOOTHPASTE TUBE
The following article provides an instructive
example of the following statement from the scientific literature, and helps
underscore the importance of the FDA-mandated poison label now required on all fluoride toothpastes sold
in the US:
“Estimating the incidence of toxic fluoride
exposures nationwide also is complicated by the existence of
biases. Parents or caregivers may not notice the symptoms associated with
mild fluoride toxicity or may attribute them to colic or gastroenteritis,
particularly if they did not see the child ingest fluoride. Similarly, because
of the nonspecific nature of mild to moderate symptoms, a physician’s
differential diagnosis is unlikely to include fluoride toxicity without a
history of fluoride ingestion.”
SOURCE: Shulman JD, Wells LM. (1997). Acute fluoride toxicity from ingesting home-use dental products in children, birth to 6 years of age. Journal of Public Health Dentistry 57: 150-8.
THE
NEWS TRIBUNE (Tacoma, Washington)
April 5, 1994
April 5, 1994
Hazards
lurk in toothpaste tube
Enumclaw sisters’ illness traced at last to chemicals
Enumclaw sisters’ illness traced at last to chemicals
By
Elaine Porterfield
Doctors worked for weeks to
find the source of 5-year-old Crystal Mustonen’s nightly bouts of nausea and
vomiting.
They gave the Enumclaw girl a
complete series of gastrointestinal tests. She likewise endured a barium enema.
Then Crystal’s 3-year-old
sister Samantha started throwing up, too.
Finally, as he watched Samantha
become ill after she brushed her teeth one night, it occurred to their father
Wayne Mustonen that maybe it was his children’s toothpaste.
Bubble
gum-flavored toothpaste, to be exact.
The next night, after Crystal
brusher her teeth, Mustonen’s hunch was confirmed. His children were swallowing
bits of toothpaste and becoming ill. The father, who’d been consumed by fear,
was thrilled to find the cause was so simple.
“When they couldn’t find
anything, we got pretty worried,” Morrrison said. “We have quite a bit of faith
in God and we did of praying.”
He immediately called the
girls’ doctor, “who said that could explain a lot,” Mustonen said.
The specific is likely not to
blame, said Terri Bonck, a Mary Bridge Children’s Hospital pharmacist and
poison control specialist. Rather, the culprit is fluoride.
“If the kids are sucking on the
tube, that’s enough to make them vomit,” she said. “It’s the fluoride itself – it’s very irritating to the stomach.”
Probably just an ounce or so of
toothpaste swallowed would be enough to make a 2- or 3-year-old vomit, she
said.
“This
is pretty common, unfortunately, because of the amount of fluoride in the
toothpaste,” Bonck said. “In poison
centers across the United States, it’s a pretty common call.”
Children likely vary in how
sensitive they are to fluoride, she said.
In addition to fluoride,
another ingredient in Sparkle toothpaste, sodium
lauryl sulfate, likewise can make people ill if swallowed, said Jim
Schwartz, spokesman for Cincinnati-based Proctor & Gamble, which makes
Crest.
“They do cause stomach upset
and will lead to vomiting if it’s consumed,” Schwartz said. “It’s an effect of
these ingredients.”
But neither ingredient is added
specifically to keep children from swallowing toothpaste, he said.
It’s important parents watch
children under 6 when they brush their teeth, Schwartz said. Just a pea-sized
dab is needed, and children must be reminded to spit.
“An important safety message to
parents is to urge them to supervise their children when they brush,” he said.
“It’s something all parents should do when using over-the-counter medicine,
like toothpaste.”
Schwartz speaks from
experience: One of his 3-year-old twin daughters recently suffered the same
experience as Crystal Mustonen.
“Our own kid swallowed some
toothpaste and threw up,” he said.
Many parents might not know
toothpaste can make children sick to their stomachs, said Chris Martin,
spokesman for American Dental Association in Chicago.
“It’s like everything, dosage
is important,” Martin said. “In small amounts, it’s safe. You’ve got to make
sure these products are treated carefully, locked away and kept out of the
reach of kids.
“It’s just not treated as you’d
treat kitchen cleaner, but we wish parents would treat it like that.”
May Mustonen, the girls’
grandmother, lives with the family and cares for the children during the day.
She said her grandchildren had been shown how to brush by a dentist and are
carefully supervised.
She wishes Proctor & Gamble
had labeled the enticing bubble-gum-flavored toothpaste with a warning that
children can suffer nausea and vomiting from swallowing it.
That could have spared Crystal
a battery of unpleasant medical tests, she said.
“We were so worried,” she said.
“I just want something put on the tube so other parents don’t go through with
their kids what we went through with ours.”
Tags: Toothpaste
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