Bo Yang, Feiqing Wang, Xu Yang, Jinyang Cheng, Juan Chen, Bingbing Li, Ying Zhou, Xiaoxu Chen, Bo Wei, Xiaoshuang Yuan, Ting Tian, Dongxin Tang, Zhixu He, Yang Liu, Yanju Li
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Endemic fluorosis is a serious public health problem in China. In order to improve the quality of drinking water, China has implemented water rehabilitation and fluoride reduction projects, but their effect on children's health outcomes is unclear. This study reviewed relevant literature published in PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, CNKI, VIP, and WanFang from the date of establishment to October 2024. Data related to demographic characteristics, duration of the water improvement project, geographical location, drinking water fluoride levels, and prevalence of dental fluorosis and urinary fluoride levels in children aged 8 to 12 years were extracted and analyzed using fixed-effects and random-effects models. With the improvement of water quality, the fluoride content decreased from 2.34 to 0.67 mg/L (drinking water standard, 1.5 mg/L). This was accompanied by a decrease in the prevalence of dental fluorosis from 56.7 to 28.8%. In regions where the drinking water fluoride content was within the limit, the prevalence of dental fluorosis decreased from 29.7 to 15.6%. The duration of implementation and geographical features of the regions under study had a significant impact on the prevalence of dental fluorosis. Finally, the urinary fluoride level decreased from 2.58 to 1.15 mg/L. The water improvement and fluoride reduction initiative effectively reduced the drinking water fluoride content and the urinary fluoride levels and the prevalence of dental fluorosis in children living in fluorosis-endemic areas in China. The improvement was associated with the geographical features of regions and the implementation time of the project.
期刊介绍:
Biological Trace Element Research provides a much-needed central forum for the emergent, interdisciplinary field of research on the biological, environmental, and biomedical roles of trace elements. Rather than confine itself to biochemistry, the journal emphasizes the integrative aspects of trace metal research in all appropriate fields, publishing human and animal nutritional studies devoted to the fundamental chemistry and biochemistry at issue as well as to the elucidation of the relevant aspects of preventive medicine, epidemiology, clinical chemistry, agriculture, endocrinology, animal science, pharmacology, microbiology, toxicology, virology, marine biology, sensory physiology, developmental biology, and related fields.