Quantitative fluoride imaging of teeth using CaF emission by laser induced breakdown spectroscopy
Mauro Martinez, G. Jean Harry, Erin N. Haynes, Pi‐I D. Lin, Emily Oken, Megan K. Horton, Robert O. Wright, Manish Arora, Christine Austin
Abstract
. This methodology was applied within a rat model of fluoride exposure and showed increasing tooth-fluoride with increased exposure dose. To demonstrate applicability of this method in human teeth, we quantified fluoride distribution in teeth from three children from non-fluorinated and fluorinated water regions. Samples from children living in fluoridated water regions showed higher fluoride concentrations in dentine formed after birth, compared to a child from a non-fluoridated region. Teeth have been used as biomarkers for environmental exposure and this new method opens the opportunity in epidemiology research to study critical windows of early life exposure to fluoride as well.