Excess fluoride is problematic for humans and can cause dental fluorosis, characterized by white or brown patches and pitting on teeth. — Whalespan
Excess fluoride is problematic for humans and can cause dental fluorosis, characterized by white or brown patches and pitting on teeth.
⚠ High risk
We can't find evidence that holds up here. Proponents are reasoning from mechanism or analogy rather than direct human data, and the most credible skeptics raise objections we can't dismiss.
✕NOTSUPPORTED
⚠
High-risk intervention — consult a physician before acting.Drug-drug interactions, dose-dependence, and screening contraindications apply.
“excess fluoride is very problematic for humans we know this without a doubt but you can see here that 18 villages in four geographical areas had water supplies with 0.2 to 0.8 milligrams per liter of fluoride that's that's higher than most natural sources of water i could find but in the united states where most counties have fluoride in the water a lot of that water is one milligram per liter so kids don't end up with fluorosis from one milligram per liter of fluoride my teeth didn't get fluorosis i definitely drank fluoride in my water i wish i hadn't”