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Fluorosis dental: etiología

Hipomineralización del esmalte por ingestión excesiva de flúor durante el desarrollo dental.

Etiology

Excessive fluoride ingestion during tooth development is the sole cause. Sources include fluoridated drinking water at concentrations above optimal (>1 ppm), fluoride supplements, swallowing of fluoride toothpaste in young children, and high fluoride foods (marine fish, tea) or beverages.

The critical period for permanent incisors is primarily ages 15-30 months; for molars, the first 3-4 years of life. Primary teeth are affected during the third trimester of pregnancy through age 2.

The severity of fluorosis is dose-dependent: mild cases from slightly elevated fluoride (2-3 ppm), severe cases from chronically high fluoride (>4-6 ppm) during tooth development.

Endemic fluorosis occurs in areas with naturally high geological fluoride in groundwater — a major public health issue in parts of India, East Africa, China, and Central Asia.