1.Villiaumite is a RARE halide mineral composed of sodium fluoride, NaF. It is very soluble in water and some specimens fluoresce under long and short
wave ultraviolet light. It has a Mohs hardness of 2.5 and is usually red, pink, or orange in color. It is toxic to humans and should be handled with
care.[2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villiaumite
"They are, furthermore, notoriously toxic, sufficiently so to be used as rat poison or insecticide. Calcium fluoride, on the other hand, which is the
form COMMONLY found in natural waters, is not toxic enough for such uses." — Dr. C. G. Dobbs, (Ph.D., A.R.C.S.) Bangor, Wales, England.
http://www.fluoridedebate.com/question03.html
— Dr. C. G. Dobbs, (Ph.D., A.R.C.S.) Bangor, Wales, England.
2, CaF2 is nowhere near the insolubility of BaSO4. You are about a couple orders of magnitude off.
"Fluorides are toxic to humans, however CaF2 is considered relatively harmless due to its extreme insolubility. The situation is ANALOGOUS to BaSO4,
where the toxicity normally associated with Ba2+ is offset by the very low solubility of its sulfate derivative."
3, I see a lot of people comparing fluorides to rat poison, including on this thread. That is horribly, horribly wrong. NaF/fluorosilicates have an
LD50 on mice and rats at about 100mg/kg. That means 10mg for a 100g rat. Might not seem a lot, but to get a rat to eat 10mg of it in bait, you have to
use a lot of it.
A small 100 gram tube of toothpaste containing 500mg NaF has enough fluoride to kill my less than 4kg dog 25 times over according to the Merck
Veterinary Manual. Just twice the rat dose of 10mg. Rats are hardly little creatures.
"Oral cleaning products present a danger to pets, especially dogs. The fatal dose of sodium fluoride is 5-10 mg/kg and toxic effects occur below 1
mg/kg. Fluoride (75-90% absorbed by 90 min) lowers serum calcium and magnesium. Clinically, gastroenteritis and cardiac (ventricular tachycardia and
ECG abnormalities) and nervous signs may be followed within a few hours by collapse and death."
http://www.merckvetmanual.com/mvm/index.jsp?cfile=htm/bc/211...
This is an article from the Environmental Working Group, a public health advocacy organization, who also had an article in my latest USAA magazine of
the 12 foods that you want to buy organic because of high pesticide levels which by the way includes natural fluoride pesticides as with grapes.
Recall Europe won't buy our wines with over 2mg per liter fluoride.
Dog Food Contaminated with Levels of Fluoride Above EPA's Legal Limit for Humans
“Due to a failed regulatory system and suspect practices by some in the pet food industry, countless dogs may be ingesting excessive fluoride that
could put them at risk,” Olga Naidenko, Ph.D, lead researcher of the EWG-sponsored study, said."
"An average dog who drinks adequate water daily would be exposed to 0.05 to 0.1 milligrams of fluoride per kilogram of body weight, depending on the
dog's weight and water consumption. But those dogs who eat food high in fluoride, day in and day out, may be exposed to unsafe levels of fluoride."
http://www.ewg.org/pethealth/report/fluoride-in-dog-food/new...
I wonder if the villi could be considered like delicate corals and you add the wrong kind of water to the tank? This guy might not have it all right,
but some facets seem plausible.
"Acute fluoride poisoning will first result in severe damage to the intestinal lining, causing acute villous atrophy of the small intestine, the same
lesion found in celiac disease and other food intolerance). It is clear that the adaptive viruses in our villi don’t like fluoride at this level and
can cause the villi to quickly shrink away in order to prevent further absorption of this potentially lethal toxin. As much as we don’t like the
symptoms associated with this intestinal process (nausea, diarrhea, cramping, gas), it is a protective mechanism designed to prevent more
life-threatening reactions to this toxin, such as kidney failure. But if the exposure is overwhelming, the blood levels can rapidly rise and more
serious signs can occur."
http://www.ewg.org/pethealth/report/fluoride-in-dog-food/new...
Lastly ...
"So saying "fluorides are toxic" doesn't mean anything, unless you talk about the dose."
That's a good point. When you mention NaF/fluorosilcates and rats I was curious if the 10 mg lethal dose was from NaF or one of the fluorosiicates
because the data would, as you say, be meaningless unless you talk about dose.
[Edited on 10-6-2012 by Morgan] |